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Thursday, 3 September 2015
Family of Syrian boy washed up on beach were trying to reach Canada
Three-year-old
Aylan Kurdi, his five-year-old brother Galip and their mother, Rehan,
died in desperate attempt to flee to relatives Aylan Kurdi and his older brother, Galip.
Photograph
The family of a three-year-old Syrian boy whose body was washed up on
a beach in Turkey were making a final, desperate attempt to flee to
relatives in Canada even though their asylum application had been rejected, according to reports.
Syria was already at war when Aylan Kurdi was born. He died with his
five-year-old brother, Galip, and mother, Rehan. Their father, Abdullah,
survived. Speaking to Canadian press on Wednesday night,
the family said Abdullah Kurdi had phoned them to tell them his wife
and sons were dead, and now only wanted to return to their Kurdish
hometown of Kobani to bury his family. The town was bombarded by heavy
fighting earlier this year between Islamic State and Kurdish fighters.
Pictures have emerged of the two brothers, a laughing Aylan and Galip
holding a teddy bear in a pink dress, as well as another of the pair
standing together on a sofa, with Galip’s arm around his small brother.
Their aunt Teema Kurdi, a hairdresser in Vancouver, heard the news
from her brother Mohammad’s wife, Ghuson. “She had got a call from
Abdullah, and all he said was, my wife and two boys are dead,” she told the National Post.
“I was trying to sponsor them, and I have my friends and my
neighbours who helped me with the bank deposits, but we couldn’t get
them out, and that is why they went in the boat.
“I was even paying rent for them in Turkey, but it is horrible the way they treat Syrians there.”
Kurdi, who emigrated to Canada more than two decades ago, said she
had privately sponsored a refugee application for the family to come and
join her in Canada, but the application had been rejected.
Aylan Kurdi and his older brother, Galip. Photograph: Twitter
Her account was confirmed by her local MP, Fin Donelly, who told the
paper that he had personally delivered Kurdi’s application to the
immigration minister, Chris Alexander.
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The
application made by Kurdi, if successful, allows refugees to move to
Canada if they have the sponsorship of at least five Canadian citizens,
on the condition those citizens provide financial and emotional support.
Only applicants who have been formally designated refugees can apply,
and many Syrian Kurds have reported difficulties getting their
applications processed in UNHCR camps in Turkey. Turkey will also not
issue exit visas to refugees if they do not have official status.
The two young brothers and their mother were among at least 12 Syrians who died on the boat headed for Greece.
The boat was part of a flotilla of small dinghies, boarded by
passengers at Akyarlar, the closest point to the Greek Aegean island of
Kos.
It overturned in calm waters, overloaded by the 17 passengers. Bodies
washed up on the shore in Ali Hoca Point beach in Bodrum. Another
dinghy, also carrying a further 16 people, is also known to have
capsized.
A Turkish police officer carries Aylan Kurdi’s body. Photograph: Reuters
The Turkish coastguard said five children and a woman had died when
the boat capsized, and another three people were still missing.
Helicopters helped rescue another 15 people.
This week, the Turkish coastguard said it had rescued over 42,000
people in the Aegean Sea in the first five months of 2015 and 2,160 in
the last week. More than 100 were pulled from the sea on Wednesday night
alone, trying to reach Kos, the coastguard told AFP.
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