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Father Of Drowned Syrian 3-Year-Old: 'We Are Human Beings, Just Like Westerners'

Relatives of 3-year-old Syrian Kurdish boy Aylan Kurdi carry his body during a funeral procession for Aylan, his mother, Rehan, and his older brother, Galip, in Kobani, Syria, on Friday.
Sipan Ibrahim
/
AP
Relatives of 3-year-old Syrian Kurdish boy Aylan Kurdi carry his body during a funeral procession for Aylan, his mother, Rehan, and his older brother, Galip, in Kobani, Syria, on Friday.

The image of the lifeless body of a boy on a Turkish beach has stunned the world and focused attention on the growing migrant crisis that has seen tens of thousands of refugees flee fighting in the Middle East, North Africa and Asia hoping for a better life in Europe.

The boy, 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi, whose body was discovered on Wednesday after an overloaded refugee boat capsized in rough seas as it tried to make its way from Turkey to Greece, was buried Friday in Kobane, Syria, along with his 5-year-old brother and mother.

His father, Abdullah Kurdi, told reporters that he tried to save his family, "But there was nothing I could do. Nothing."

Galip, 5, died first, he said.

"Then Aylan and then their mother. There you go; that's my story. I hope the world will learn something from it," Kurdi said.

"I hope this people will be helped, that these massacres are stopped. We are human beings, just like Westerners. Why are we trying to get to Europe when our country's more beautiful? That's just how it is," he said.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Scott Neuman is a reporter and editor, working mainly on breaking news for NPR's digital and radio platforms.
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