Mail Online

TRAGIC GIRL, 5, WAS TAKING TEDDY TO DAD

By Abul Taher

A MOTHER and her four children, including a daughter aged just five, are feared to be among those who drowned in last week’s Channel tragedy.

The Kurdish family, who lived in a squalid camp in Dunkirk before attempting the crossing, are thought to be among at least 27 migrants who died when their flimsy dinghy capsized in freezing waters on Wednesday.

A friend at the Grande-Synthe camp said they were hoping to be reunited in the UK with the children’s father and they had been so excited that they had bought a teddy bear for him.

The family were from Darbandikhan in Iraqi Kurdistan. Khazal Ahmad Khdir, 42, was travelling with her son, Twana Mamand Muhammad Hussein, 19, daughter Hadya Rizger, 17, son Mobeen, 15, and five-yearold daughter Hasty.

They left Iraq a month ago for Turkey. From there they took a boat to Italy before travelling to France in the back of lorries, according to friends.

News that the family was feared dead appeared on Facebook, where one relative said Khazal and her children had phoned from the boat before their handsets fell silent.

‘Even in the boat there were phone calls,’ the relative said. ‘We were with them. But that night we heard news about the drowning. We have not heard from them since.’

The doomed dinghy left LoonPlage beach, near Dunkirk, carrying up to 30 people. Despite initial reports that it had been hit by a larger vessel, it is now believed the dinghy capsized when it began taking on water and its occupants panicked.

It emerged on Friday that Kurdish student Maryam Nuri Muhammadamin was among the dead. The 24-year-old was hoping to be reunited with her fiancé in Bournemouth. Another Kurdish woman, called Mahabad, 23, from Erbil, was also reported yesterday to be among the victims, as was Bryar Hamad Abdulrahman, 24, also from Erbil.

Former campmates in Dunkirk suggested three further names for victims, who had each paid around £3,000 for a place on the boat. They were Rezhwan Yasin, Mohammed Kader and Zanear Mustafa, from Ranya in Iraqi Kurdistan.

French detectives fear the death toll could rise further. The only two survivors, an Iraqi Kurd named last night as Mohammed Shekha, a 21-yearold shepherd, and a Somalian named Omar, aged in his 20s, have described scenes of ‘mass panic’ to officers as the dinghy began to deflate.

Snp Conference

en-gb

2021-11-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

2021-11-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://mailonline.pressreader.com/article/282011855632564

dmg media (UK)