The European migration crisis got a tragic human face on Wednesday:
Aylan Kurdi, a 3-year old refugee from Kobani, Syria, whose body washed
ashore in Turkey along with his 5-year-old brother, Galip. Aylan, Galip,
their mother, and nine others died trying to reach the Greek island
Kos, an entry into Europe for many Syrians and other refugees seeking asylum.
Photos of the dead toddler seized the world's attention:
The news media and social media were split sharply on whether to show more graphic, heartbreaking photos
of Kurdi's lifeless body, but advocates for the migrants and some
journalists said seeing Kurdi dead in the sand was a necessary jolt as
hundreds of would-be refugees are dying en route to Europe.
"The image is not offensive, it is not gory, it is not tasteless — it
is merely heartbreaking, and stark testimony of an unfolding human
tragedy that is playing out in Syria, Turkey, and Europe, often
unwitnessed," argued Kim Murphy, a news editor at the Los Angeles Times.
"We have written stories about hundreds of migrants dead in capsized
boats, sweltering trucks, lonely rail lines, but it took a tiny boy on a
beach to really bring it home to those readers who may not yet have
grasped the magnitude of the migrant crisis."
In Canada, meanwhile, a legislator says
that Kurdi's aunt had submitted a request to bring the family to Canada
from Turkey, but that Canadian immigration officials denied the
request. European leaders have been unable to agree on how to deal with
the huge influx of Africans, Afghans, Syrians, and others fleeing war
and other violence.
http://theweek.com/speedreads/575311/photo-drowned-toddler-galvanizes-world-amid-european-migrant-crisis
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