Death beach: the desperation continues

Published Sep 4, 2015

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Bodrum, Turkey - Days after the world's conscience was shocked by the image of a dead toddler washed up on a Turkish beach, the only thing holding back more Syrian refugees from attempting the same crossing was a media frenzy of journalists crowding the shore.

“We saw the picture of the baby, (but) we have no other chance,” says 36-year old Abdulmenem Alsatouf, a father of three children who once ran a supermarket in the Syrian city of Idlib.

He is now one of thousands of migrants waiting for their chance to make the 4 km nocturnal crossing to the Greek island of Kos from Turkey's resort of Bodrum, one perilous leg in a journey for which smugglers charge thousands of dollars.

“We can't go back to Idlib, and there is no job for us in Turkey. I want to go to Germany but Sweden, Belgium, they are all fine. We are going to go to Kos in a few days,” he added.

The Turkish coastguard said it stopped 57 people in three boats on Thursday night. But that is a tiny fraction of the 2,000 migrants a day that aid groups say have been reaching Greece.

Harrowing images showing the tiny body of 3-year old Aylan Kurdi lying face-down in the surf near Bodrum have jolted European governments and put a human face on the crisis. His 5-year-old brother Galip and mother were also among at least 12 who died from a group of 23 on two boats.

But those planning to make the journey say they already know the odds. The United Nations refugee agency estimates more than 300 000 people have used dangerous sea routes to reach Europe this year alone, with around 2 500 lost at sea.

“I know the trip is dangerous, these deaths didn't start with the toddler, many people have drowned,” 22-year old Mohammad Shaar said as he waited for his chance to cross.

“If European policies were not so brutal, our people wouldn't have died in the sea. These people are obliged to make that trip, there is no other way for us.”

Suspects accused of smuggling

Four other Syrians appeared in handcuffs at a courthouse in Bodrum on Friday, accused of smuggling in connection with the voyage in which Aylan and his family died. The mother of one of the suspects, Meliha Recep, insisted her son was not a smuggler but himself a migrant.

“They did nothing, they were just trying to escape. Our children are also victims. They were just on the same boat, that's all,” Recep, dressed in a grey headscarf, told reporters.

Turkey says it is trying to stem the flow of migrants leaving its shores. Of the 57 Syrian, Afghan and Pakistani migrants detained on Thursday evening, those that have identifying documents and are not from Syria will be deported back to their country of origin, authorities said.

The rest will remain in Turkey, which already hosts 2 million Syrian refugees and has borne much of the brunt of the humanitarian fallout from the four year civil war in neighbouring Syria, at a cost of $6 billion.

With infrastructure buckling and work permits difficult to come by, Turkey's Aegean coastline has become a key jumping-off point for refugees hoping for permanent homes and a better life in Europe.

A woman named Ayse was selling life-jackets to migrants in Bodrum, a trade she said had replaced her usual income selling silver trinkets to tourists.

Hers were genuine, she said, but other life jackets on sale in the town for half the price were dangerous fakes: “They pay thousands of dollars to make the trip and don't care to pay $10 more to buy real life vests for their kids, that's very sad.”

Speaking at a meeting of G20 finance ministers his country hosted on Friday, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Turkey would continue to welcome refugees, and other countries should do more to help keep them safe.

“Let that body (of Aylan) become a warning signal for all of us. If Syrian children are not safe, no children are safe in their homes in Ankara, Paris or New York. Those children didn't decide where they would be born. It is their destiny. But it is our decisions that will determine their future.”

Abdullah Kurdi, the father of Aylan and Galip, returned on Friday to Syria to bury them in the ravaged border town of Kobani, which was largely destroyed by bitter fighting between Islamic State and Kurdish militants since last year.

An emotional Kurdi wept as his sons and wife were laid to rest, and also called on Arab governments to do more to alleviate the refugee crisis.

Reuters

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