Families of Vietnamese missing in UK stuck with crippling migrant loans

Families of Vietnamese missing in UK stuck with crippling migrant loans

HA TINH, Vietnam: They borrowed thousands of dollars to fund their children's illegal trips to ..

HA TINH, Vietnam: They borrowed thousands of dollars to fund their children's illegal trips to Europe, and now the Vietnamese parents of missing migrants feared dead in Britain have no idea how to pay off the crippling loans.

Their children planned to send back money after getting hoped-for jobs in the UK, where 39 people were found dead in a truck last week.

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Families in central Vietnam think their loved ones might have been in the refrigerated container, leaving behind mountains of debt borrowed from relatives or credit unions.

READ: Truck driver remanded at UK court over 39 dead migrants

The money was handed over to smugglers for flights, fake passports and truck rides into Europe, a prime destination for migrants escaping remote villages and dreaming of better lives abroad.

Some of their children were already working in Europe, sending hundreds of dollars back every month to families in an impoverished part of Vietnam where most people are farmers, fishermen or factory workers.

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"We still owe nearly US$8,600," said Nguyen Dinh Gia, who believes his son Nguyen Dinh Luong was in the truck found in the industrial outskirts of London.

The family borrowed from relatives to finance Luong's trip, which took him to Russia then France where he had lived since 2018, working as a waiter.

He had been been sending back between US$250 and US$430 home a month to make good on the loan, promising his family he would find work to send more.

He hoped he could earn more money in Britain, and asked his family to find another US$14,000 to pay smugglers when he arrived.

But they don't think he made it and no one has called for the fee.

Gia says he's "lucky" the loan is interest-free, but still worries about scratching enough money together to repay it.

"We are farmers, we have nothing to do. We survive off of our children now," said Gia, whose seven other children are still in Vietnam.

Vietnam's central provinces have long been locked in poverty – battered by environmental disasters, lacklustre development, and unpredictable weather linked to climate change that has hit people hard.

In Ha Tinh, the per capita annual income is US$2,200, below the national average of nearly US$2,600. In neighbouring Nghe An, where many of the missing migrants also come from, it's just US$1,200.

In Vietnam's Nghe An province, where many of the missing migrants come from, per capita annual income is just $1,200, prompting many to borrow money to send family members abroad in search of work AFP/NHAC NGUYEN

READ: Vietnam police take DNA from relatives of suspected UK truck victims

EASY CREDIT

Poverty often forces families to seek help from local state-run credit funds, which are relatively common across rural Vietnam and provide easy access to low-interest loans.

Some use the cash to open shops or build houses. Others like Hoang Lanh use it to send their children abroad.

He paid smugglers to send his son Hoang Van Tiep to Europe, landing in France a year ago.

Now he fears his son was one of those found in the truck.

Though Tiep regularly sent money earned from his dishwashing job, his father still owes the bank US$4,300.

"We don't know how we're going to pay back the debt. I don't have any plan," said the fisherman in Dien Chua commune, who brings home barely more than US$200 a month.

Hoang offered his landRead More – Source

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