Migrants saved from refrigerated truck

Tents are reflected in a puddle with waste inside the camp known as the Jungle in Calais, northern France. Picture: Markus Schreiber

Tents are reflected in a puddle with waste inside the camp known as the Jungle in Calais, northern France. Picture: Markus Schreiber

Published Nov 4, 2015

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Fifteen migrants suffering from hypothermia were found alive in the back of a refrigerated lorry in northern France after a blind search by emergency services triggered by a call from one of the trapped men.

The authorities said they received a “strange call” around 08.00 GMT from “a man speaking English in a barely audible voice, who seemed to be suffocating, and did not know where he was”.

They were unable to trace the call because the phone was using a foreign SIM card, but after lengthy exchanges they figured out the lorry was somewhere on the highway between Paris and Lille.

The operator who took the call could also hear others in the background.

Ambulances then travelled up and down the motorway until they spotted the lorry at a rest stop and went to investigate.

“They tapped on the lorry and knew there were people inside,” said a emergency services source.

With the help of roadside assistance, they were able to force the doors open and found 15 men aged between 25 and 45.

Their nationalities were not given.

“Inside, amid crates of oranges, they found 15 migrants who could barely breathe and were in various stages of hypothermia,” said the source.

The driver, who was not in the lorry when it was found but returned soon after, said he did not know what he was carrying.

He was detained by police.

One of the migrants was treated immediately at the scene while the others were transported to nearby hospitals.

Thousands of migrants, most from East Africa and the Middle East, have streamed into France on the way to the northern port of Calais in the hope of ultimately reaching Britain.

AFP

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