Tragedy of African plane stowaway, who dreamed of life abroad but plunged to his doom over London

Smiling pleasantly, with an arm around his partner, there’s little sign of yearning on the part of the young man in the picture, save perhaps for the T-shirt emblazoned with the word London.
However, for Carlito Vale, a young Mozambican immigrant whose initial venturings abroad would take him to Uganda and South Africa, London would come to be associated with tragedy.
Six months after a body was found on a London roof below the Heathrow flight path , he can now be identified as the person who officials believe fell from the undercarriage of a British Airways flight as it was about to land after its 12,800km journey from Johannesburg.

While Vale has yet to be officially named, authorities have made contact with an orphanage in Mozambique’s second city of Beira as part of efforts to confirm that he was the man who died. The Guardian was contacted by the orphanage, which does not wish to be named, because its founders wanted to trace those who had left flowers at the scene near Heathrow last June.
While Vale’s motivation for his desperate gamble of stowing away on the flight will perhaps remain unknown, his story is one that echoes that of millions of other migrants. At its core is the simple dream of a better life elsewhere.