KECSKEMET, Hungary—Four men suspected of being involved in the deaths of 71 migrants found in a truck in Austria were placed under preliminary arrest on Saturday by a Hungarian court.
The preliminary arrests will be in place until the suspects are indicted on September 29, at the latest, said Ferenc Bicskei, president of the Kecskemet Court.
The court agreed with prosecutors that the severity of the crime and the risk that the suspects would flee justified their arrest. Bicskei said the four suspects appealed the decision, saying they had not committed any crimes.
The three Bulgarian suspects are aged 29, 30 and 50, officials said, while the fourth suspect—an Afghan—is 28 years old.
The refrigerated truck with the dead migrants was found on Thursday in the safety lane of the main Budapest-to-Vienna highway. The suspects were detained later that day in southern Hungary, near the border with Serbia, where Hungary is building a four-meter high fence.
Hungary’s Defense Ministry said on Saturday it had completed the first phase of construction—three coils of razor wire stretched along the 174-kilometer boundary.
The human trafficking case is being heard in Kecskemet, in central Hungary, because the truck set off from that city before picking up the migrants near the border with Serbia, Gabor Schmidt, a spokesman for the Bacs-Kiskun county chief prosecution office, told reporters outside the courthouse before the hearings.
Schmidt said Hungarian authorities are investigating the suspects’ involvement in the human-trafficking aspects of the case, while their suspected connection to the deaths of the migrants is being investigated by Austrian authorities.
He said the prosecution strongly suspects the four men cooperated in the transportation of the migrants from Hungary to Austria, adding that human smuggling carries a sentence of between two and 16 years in prison.
The four handcuffed men were taken into the court building through a side entrance. The defense lawyers of the suspects were not present and will be notified of the court decisions, court spokesman Szabolcs Sarkozy said.
It wasn’t clear how long the bodies had been inside the truck, but police believe the migrants may already have been dead by the time the truck crossed into Austria overnight on Wednesday. Austrian officials believe they suffocated.
Autopsies were being conducted, with results expected in several days.
Helmut Marban, a police spokesman in Austria said the truck was being checked “millimeter by millimeter” by investigators gathering evidence for the court case.
Image credits: Tamas Kovacs/MTI via AP