Migrant crisis: Images of drowned toddler provoke outcry

Boy was one of 12 Syrian refugees who died after their boat capsized off Turkey coast

A Turkish police officer carries the body of a  child after boats carrying  refugees to the Greek island of Kos capsized. Photograph: DHA/AP Photot
A Turkish police officer carries the body of a child after boats carrying refugees to the Greek island of Kos capsized. Photograph: DHA/AP Photot

An image of a drowned toddler washed up on the beach in one of Turkey's prime tourist resorts swept across social media on Wednesday, after at least 12 presumed Syrian refugees died while trying to reach the Greek island of Kos.

The picture showed a little boy wearing a bright red t-shirt and shorts lying face-down in the surf on a beach near the resort town of Bodrum.

In a second image, a policeman carries the body away.

A young refugee, who drowned in a failed attempt to sail to the Greek island of Kos, lies on the shore in the coastal town of Bodrum, Turkey. Photograph: Nilufer Demir/DHA/Reuters
A young refugee, who drowned in a failed attempt to sail to the Greek island of Kos, lies on the shore in the coastal town of Bodrum, Turkey. Photograph: Nilufer Demir/DHA/Reuters

Turkish media identified the boy as 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi, whose 5-year-old brother died on the same boat.

READ MORE

Media reports said he was from the north Syrian town of Kobani near the Turkish border, the scene of heavy fighting between Islamic State insurgents and Kurdish regional forces a few months ago.

The hashtag “KiyiyaVuranInsanlik” - “humanity washed ashore” - became the top trending topic on Twitter.

In the first few hours after the accident, the image had been retweeted thousands of times.

The two boats, carrying a total of 23 people, had set off separately from the Akyarlar area of the Bodrum peninsula, a senior Turkish naval official said.

The confirmed dead included five children and one woman. Seven people were rescued and two reached the shore in life-jackets.

The official said hopes were fading of saving the two people who are still missing.

The army said its search and rescue teams had saved hundreds of migrants in the seas between Turkey and the Greek islands over the last few days.

Syrian refugees

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, their gateway to the European Union.

In a statement late on Wednesday, Turkey’s National Security Council voiced concern over the immigration policies of European countries.

“European countries’ worrying approach to the flow of migrants has caused sorrow and it has been evaluated that the issue should be taken up in a basic human rights perspective,” the statement said.

The official said almost 100 people in all had been rescued by Turkish vessels overnight as they tried to reach Kos.

Aid agencies estimate that, over the past month, about 2,000 people a day have been making the short crossing to Greece’s eastern islands on rubber dinghies.

A ship bringing about 1,800 migrants and refugees from one of the islands arrived at the port of Piraeus near Athens on Tuesday night, the Greek coastguard said.

Thousands of people, mainly Africans, have also been trying to reach Europe via boat from Libya to Italy.

The United Nations refugee agency UNHCR said four bodies had been pulled from the central Mediterranean on Tuesday and 781 migrants rescued, mostly from Nigeria, Ivory Coast and Senegal.

So far this year, more than 2,500 people have died trying to cross the Mediterranean, the UNHCR said.

Reuters