Abdullah Kurdi collapsed in tears after emerging from a morgue in
the city of Mugla near Bodrum in Turkey, where the body of his
3-year-old son, Aylan, washed up on Wednesday.
A photograph of the boy's tiny body in a bright red T-shirt and dark
shorts, face-down in the surf, appeared in newspapers around the
world, prompting sympathy and outrage at the perceived inaction of
developed nations in helping refugees.
Aylan's 5-year-old brother, Galip, and mother, Rehan, 35, were among
12 people, including other children, who died after two boats
capsized while trying to reach the Greek island of Kos.
"I just want to sit next to the grave of my children and my wife and
rest," Abdullah told reporters, as his family's coffins were loaded
into a hearse.
"The things that happened to us here, in the country where we took
refuge to escape war in our homeland, we want the whole world to see
this," he said.
"We want the world’s attention on us, so they can prevent the same
from happening to others. Let this be the last."
In a statement to police obtained by the Hurriyet newspaper,
Abdullah said he had twice paid smugglers to take him and his family
to Greece but their efforts had failed. On their final attempt, the
boat began to take in water and when people stood up in panic, it
capsized.
"I was holding my wife's hand. My children slipped away from my
hands. We tried to hold on to the boat," he said in the statement.
"Everyone was screaming in pitch darkness. I couldn't make my voice
heard to my wife and kids."
The image of Aylan, drowned off one of Turkey's most popular holiday
resorts, went viral on social media and piled pressure on European
leaders.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan discussed the crisis with his
French counterpart Francois Hollande, Erdogan's office said.
"European countries, which have turned the Mediterranean, the cradle
of the world's oldest civilizations, into a cemetery for refugees,
shares the sin for every refugee who loses their life," Erdogan said
in a speech in Ankara.
Meanwhile French Prime Minister Manuel Valls took to Twitter: "He
had a name: Aylan Kurdi. Urgent action required - A Europe-wide
mobilization is urgent," he wrote.
WANTED TO EMIGRATE TO CANADA FROM SYRIA
Abdullah's family had wanted to emigrate to Canada after fleeing the
war-torn town of Kobani, in northern Syria, a revelation which also
put Canada's Conservative government under fire from its political
opponents.
Abdullah said Canadian officials had now offered him citizenship
after seeing what had happened but that he declined. Canadian
officials in the capital Ottawa said it was not true that Ottawa had
offered him citizenship.
Abdullah's sister in Vancouver said contrary to earlier reports, she
had not yet tried to sponsor Abdullah or his wife and sons to come
to Canada, but that she had first sponsored another brother, whose
application had been rejected.
Tima Kurdi said the brother's application was rejected because the
family did not have a United Nations number which they could not
obtain because they lacked Turkish identification. She said she
could only afford to sponsor her brothers one at a time.
"They didn't deserve to die, they didn't. They were going for a
better life. That shouldn't have happened. It shouldn't have
happened to them," she told reporters in Vancouver, breaking down in
tears.
"To be honest, I don't want to just blame the Canadian government.
I'm blaming the whole world for this."
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TURKEY ABSORBS TWO MILLION REFUGEES
Turkey has won international praise for taking in 2 million refugees
since the Syrian civil war began in March 2011, spending $6 billion
caring for them and receiving just $400 million in outside aid.
But it has warned it is reaching capacity, and thousands are now
making the perilous journey by boat from Turkey to Greece in a bid
to enter Europe.
Security officials in Mugla said the bodies of Abdullah's two sons
and wife would be flown via Istanbul to the southeastern city of
Sanliurfa, from where they would be taken by road to the Syrian
border town of Kobani.
Kobani, the family's hometown, has been the scene of intense
fighting over the last year. In recent months, Kurdish regional
forces have been trying to repel attempts by Islamic State to
recapture the town.
Tens of thousands of Syrians fleeing the war in their homeland have
descended on Turkey's Aegean coast this summer to board boats to
Greece.
The Turkish army said its search and rescue teams had saved hundreds
of migrants in the seas between Turkey and Greek islands over the
last few days.
OTHER CHILDREN DROWNED
The two boats that capsized while carrying the two children who
drowned were carrying a total of 23 people and had set off from the
Akyarlar area of the Bodrum peninsula, a naval official said. Local
authorities have detained four suspected Syrian smugglers, the Dogan
news agency said.
One of the survivors, Zeynep Abbas Hadi, fainted after seeing the
dead bodies of two of her children, aged 9 and 11, footage on the
Dogan website showed. Her 7-year-old daughter survived, the agency
said.
Another survivor, Syrian Omer Mohsin, said he swam ashore after the
boat sank shortly after heading off at 2 a.m. (2300 GMT) and was
looking for his missing brother.
"There were supposed to be 10 people on the boat, but they put 17
people on board. Me and my brother paid 2,050 euros ($2,280) each,"
Dogan quoted him as saying on its website.
Video footage showed the body of another young child, thought to be
Aylan's brother, also lying in the sand.
Nilufer Demir, the Dogan photographer who took the picture of Aylan,
told broadcaster CNN Turk: "When I realized there was nothing to do
to bring that boy back to life I thought I had to take his picture
... to show the tragedy."
"I hope the impact this photo has created will help bring a
solution," she said.
($1 = 0.8991 euro)
(Additional reporting by Tulay Karadeniz in Ankara, Humeyra Pamuk
and Daren Butler in Istanbul, Julie Gordon in Vancouver and Andrea
Hopkins in Toronto; Writing by Nick Tattersall and Dasha Afanasieva;
Editing by Gareth Jones)
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