A small 56ft boat, which carried the 120 migrants, sinks into the sea off Turkey's western coast
Turkish police officers have the awful task of looking for bodies on a beach in Canakkale's Bademli district
In horrific scenes the world hoped it would never see again, a Turkish police officer lifts a tiny, lifeless child from a beach – and gently places it into an open body bag.
The
moment is harrowingly reminiscent of the fate of Alan Kurdi, the Syrian
toddler whose death shocked the world after he was washed up on a
Turkish beach in September 2015
Four months later, these
pictures from the drowning Saturday January 30,2016 of at least 39 migrants attempting
to cross the sea from Turkey into Europe convey a tragedy now all too
chillingly familiar
The lifeless body of the migrant boy lies on the beach, with his face covered by a blue woolly hat
Only hours
earlier, the child, dressed in an anorak to protect it from the cold,
had been among 120 refugees hoping to sail from mainland Turkey to the
Greek island of Lesbos – a popular route for migrants seeking entry to
the European Union.
Even
in the dark it should have been a relatively straightforward journey of
just five nautical miles aboard a 56ft yacht – and it seems many of the
passengers were issued with lifejackets.
Yet
just minutes after casting off from the village of Behram in the
province of Canakkale, the vessel struck rocks and began taking on
water.
Many of those crouching above deck jumped into the sea and swam to safety. But those below deck were trapped.
As
the sun rose over the Turkish coastline yesterday, their bodies began
drifting back towards the shoreline, near the resort of Ayvacik.
Horrified
locals used the lifejackets to cover bodies of the dead including at
least one other child, while a baby’s dummy and a tiny blue woollen hat
were also seen on the beach. The vessel could be seen just 50 yards out
to sea.
As
mayor Mehmut Sahin said: ‘Local people woke up to the sound of
screaming migrants and we have been carrying out rescue work since dawn.
I am afraid the numbers [of dead] will rise as the divers continue the
search.’
Note
Turkey
is currently hosting 2.5 million Syrian refugees. In November, the
country received £2.5 billion of EU investment to help stem the flow of
migrants
More
than one million migrants arrived in the EU last year and some 3,600
died or went missing
Around 500,000 refugees from the five-year-old war
in Syria travelled through Turkey and then risked their lives at sea to
reach the Greek islands in 2015.
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