Bodies of migrants who drowned in Channel disaster are returned to Iraqi Kurdistan

Men outside a mosque in the town of Ranya pray over the bodies of three migrants before burial - Hawre Khalid/Getty Images Europe
Men outside a mosque in the town of Ranya pray over the bodies of three migrants before burial - Hawre Khalid/Getty Images Europe

At least 16 bodies of Iraqi Kurdish migrants who drowned in November when their dinghy deflated while they tried to cross the English Channel were returned on Sunday to Iraqi Kurdistan.

The disaster, in which 27 people died on Nov 24, was the worst on record involving migrants trying to cross the Channel to Britain from France.

A man waits for the arrival of the coffins of Iraqi Kurdish migrants - Azad Lashkari/Reuters
A man waits for the arrival of the coffins of Iraqi Kurdish migrants - Azad Lashkari/Reuters

The plane carrying the bodies landed early morning in the airport at Erbil, capital of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region. Ambulances took the coffins of the victims to their home towns.

Shukriya Bakir, whose son drowned, said: "The last time I heard my son's voice was when he got on board the boat. He said, 'Don't worry Mum, I will reach England shortly'. Now he's back to me in a coffin."

Hundreds of thousands of people have slipped into the wealthy economies of Western Europe with the help of smugglers in the past decade, fleeing conflict, persecution and poverty on epic journeys from Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Yemen, Sudan and elsewhere. Few are welcomed.

Iraq is no longer at war since the defeat of Islamic State in 2017. But a lack of opportunities and basic services, as well as a political system most Iraqis say is corrupt and nepotistic, mean many people see little chance of a decent life at home.