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Cocklers rescued after memorial

Morecambe Bay
Victims' bodies were carried to ambulances in last week's tragedy.

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MORECAMBE BAY, England, (Reuters) -- A full-scale rescue operation was launched on Thursday after a group of cocklers became stranded in Morecambe Bay, only hours after a memorial service for 19 mainly Chinese workers who died there last week.

The group of 30 to 40 cockle-pickers was quickly rescued but not before the coast guard had scrambled the lifeboat hovercraft to pluck them from the dangerous bay in northwest England.

"A full scale rescue operation was launched from the lifeboat center in Morecambe after a tractor pulling a trailer with cockle-pickers became stranded on the bay," a Lancashire police spokeswoman said.

"They have now been pulled to safety and the people on the trailer are all safe and well."

The group were all said to be locals.

The incident came less than two hours after a service was held to remember the 17 men and two women who drowned when they were caught by fast-rising tides as they collected cockles in Morecambe Bay last Thursday.

Three local Buddhist monks staged the service, chanting prayers for more than an hour at a small shrine on the beach before walking along the sea front, splashing water towards the scene where the workers died. They were joined by around 100 locals and members of the Chinese community.

On Wednesday, police released five people, all survivors of last week's tragedy, who had been arrested on suspicion of manslaughter over the deaths of the cockle-gatherers.

Two women were released on bail to reappear before police in April and three men were handed over to immigration services. Two other men were released on bail on Tuesday night.

The deaths have focused attention in Britain on gang labor, where so-called gangmasters use migrant laborers, often illegally, to do poorly paid jobs in agriculture and unskilled industrial work such as in the building trade.

Morecambe Bay has notoriously dangerous tides and sands.
Morecambe Bay has notoriously dangerous tides and sands.

Local MP Geraldine Smith said on Thursday she warned the Home Office eight months ago that immigrants were being exploited in dangerous conditions in the area around the bay after hearing about a raid by authorities on a beach nearby.

Meanwhile a group of 54 Greek gypsies returned to Greece this week after a rescue mission led by the Greek Embassy freed them from what they called "slave labor" on an English flower farm.

The group said they had been beaten, starved and denied wages while working on the farm in Penzance, in Cornwall, at the tip of southwestern England.



Copyright 2004 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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