Kurdish village fears the worst for its loved ones after Channel disaster
Very little is known about the 27 people
who drowned trying to cross the Channel in an inflatable boat on Wednesday,
other than that many are thought to have come from northern Iraq.
In the Kurdish village of Ranya, families
had been waiting for days for news from loved ones they knew were planning to
attempt the perilous crossing on Wednesday, but whose phones had gone silent.
Some hoped their sons, brothers, daughters and sisters had made it across the
Channel and were now in detention centres in the UK. Others feared the worst.
One man showed the Guardian a map on his
phone with a red pin halfway across the Channel – a location marker sent from
his son’s phone before it went dead.
A text exchange between another, Twana, and
his brother Zana was even more ominous. “Now we are going to the boat,” Twana
wrote. “How is the weather, is it good? How many people are you?” Zana asked.
“The weather is not good,” came the reply. There had been no messages from
Twana since.
Kurdish Iraq has spawned thousands of
migrant journeys, with many of its people ending up in the European Union or
the UK. But the recent exodus has been different. “It was really dangerous and
really desperate,” said one London-based Kurd who spoke with a relative in
Dunkirk on Wednesday and has not heard from him since. “We think at least one
boat made it here, but no one has confirmed anything.”
In Ranya, worried families had been in
constant contact with their relatives in Dunkirk before the phones went dead.
“My brother left home in August 2021 and he went to Turkey, then Italy, and on
the 1 November he arrived in France,” said Zana. They tried to cross to the UK
six times. This attempt was the seventh.
“I was in touch with him until their boat
engine stopped working and also the front of the boat was losing air. The boat
was inflatable and it was grey. They then called French police and the police
told them you are outside our border. Then they called the UK police and the
police said, ‘We will come to rescue you.’ The police asked them to turn on
their mobile flashlights.
“I was in touch with him for 20 minutes
after they called the British police and then I lost connection with them. He
sent me the location of where their engine stopped. Since then I have no
information about him.
“He was always with 10 other people from
Ranya and I was in touch with all of them. None of their families know anything
about them.”
Zana said those who had previously crossed
the Channel had thrown their phones in the sea as the police approached, to
prevent UK authorities discovering who else might be attempting the same
journey.
“If the police see that they are in touch
with people in the UK, then they make problems for people there who are helping
them. We wish we knew something. Even the smallest thing.”
He described the mood in the family home as
“funereal”. The same solemnity was evident in another home not far away, where
dozens of cars were parked in front of a small house, full of sombre guests.
“We believe this tragedy happened after the
UK government conspired with the French to stop these crossings happening,”
said one of the guests. “Usually the sea is full of ships and that’s why the
six earlier attempts failed. But on that night it was empty and over 250 people
took advantage of it. There were no police on the water. And the search and
rescue drone wasn’t flying.”
One man cried as a list of missing Ranya
men – mostly aged 18 to 25 – was written out and passed around. By evening,
there were 10 names of people whose phones had gone silent.
“We really want to hear something,” said a
villager from nearby Pashdar, who spoke to a relative in London. “We know that
some of these boys are likely in a UK prison and we are thankful for that. But
we know in our hearts that others are not coming home. In our culture it’s
early to say this. But may God rest their souls.”