A 26-year-old Vietnamese woman texted her mom frantically that she was suffocating in the truck in which the bodies of 39 people were found in England — and apologized that her journey to a better life ended tragically, according to a report.

“I’m sorry Mom, my path to abroad didn’t succeed,” Pham Thi Tra My wrote in a series of messages about 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, according to the Mirror.

“Mom, I love you and Dad so much! I’m dying because I can’t breathe,” she added.

News about the young woman’s final moments emerged as two more people were arrested after eight women and 31 men were found dead Wednesday in a case that has shocked Britain and made headlines around the world.

A man and a woman, both 38 and from Warrington in northwest England, were arrested on suspicion of manslaughter and conspiracy to traffic people, according to Essex police. The driver, Mo Robinson, 25, was arrested earlier on suspicion of murder.

The victims in the refrigerated trailer were initially all believed to be Chinese nationals, but that has now been called into question.

The Vietnamese Embassy in London has been in contact with Essex police amid reports that Vietnamese nationals were among the victims, according to CNN.

My’s desperate family said they have not heard from her since she sent the shocking messages and have turned to a human rights activist to help them track down information about their loved one.

“My’s family has asked for help. The person told me there were six other people asking for similar assistance to find out whereabouts of their relatives,” Hoa Nghiem of Human Rights Space in Hanoi wrote about the family’s plight on social media, the Mirror reported.

“We don’t know if that would make six cases as we are verifying names. And we don’t know if they are in that Essex truck. We hope they are not,” she added, including a photo of the missing woman.

My’s family said she paid human traffickers the equivalent of up to $38,000 to be smuggled into the UK by way of China in hopes of starting a new life.

Two other Vietnamese families also have raised concerns that their missing relatives, a 26-year-old man and a 19-year-old woman, may have been aboard the truck in the town of Grays.

The British embassy in Hanoi said in a statement: “The nationality of the victims has not been confirmed at this stage. The UK authorities are working as fast as possible to identify the victims and inform their families.”

The refrigerated truck container carrying the bodies was transported from Belgium to the UK on a ferry called the Clementine, according to CNN.

“We have ways to reconstruct the route of the container but it’s not instantaneous, it can take time,” Eric Van Duyse, spokesman for the Belgian federal prosecutor’s office, told AFP.

The Clementine, which belongs to Cobelfret Ferries, regularly shuttles between Zeebrugge, Belgium, and Purfleet in the UK, according to maritime timetables seen by the network.

Cobelfret Ferries confirmed to CNN that one of their vessels had transported the container but refused to detail which one. They also refused to comment on whether the Clementine carried the container from the Belgian port of Zeebrugge to Purfleet on the River Thames estuary.

The Associated Press visited the address of a company in Bulgaria that the country said owns the truck — but residents of the building in the Black Sea port of Varna said it has never had any offices of foreign companies.

According to Bulgarian news reports, the owner of the truck was a company named Tomorrow Movements Today registered in Varna by an Irish woman.

It’s common for companies from Western Europe to register their trucking companies in Bulgaria due to low taxes and easy registration procedures.

On Friday, the first autopsies were to set to take place as investigators try to determine how the victims died before the work begins on trying to identify them.

“Formal identification will then follow … and will be a lengthy but crucial part of this investigation. As our investigations continue, the picture may change regarding identification,” police said Friday.

People living close to the port at Purfleet said illegal immigrants were a familiar sight.

“It’s a magnet for illegals,” Janet Lilley, 61, told AFP. “People would come strolling out of the docks, get in the vans and that’s it, they drive off.”

With Post wires