PHOTO: Father of drowned Syrian toddler Aylan Kurdi buries his son on Friday


I did not know what to say about the now-iconic photograph of 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi, lying on a Turkish beach after he, his brother, and his mother tried to cross the Mediterranean.

This was a tragic death. But there have been millions of tragedies in the killings, starvations, disappearances, abuses, and flights from home in Syria’s 4 1/2-year conflict.

As the photograph went viral, what could I add which would illuminate the needless pain, destruction, and death — even as more refugees from Syria and elsewhere tried to find some haven, for example, in Europe?

However, in the last 72 hours, there have been glimmers of hope and humanity, with people in Austria and Germany pressing their Governments and opening their homes to refugees — some of whom walked more than a 100 miles from Hungary to Austria after they were prevented from travelling by train.

A Syrian boy with a German policeman outside the central bus station in Munich (Christof Stache/AFP/Getty):

SYRIA BOY GERMAN POLICEMAN

It is those glimmers that are alongside this cry from the Maysaloon blog, published on Thursday, about how much more needs to be done — not only about the refugees but also about the ongoing catastrophe forcing them to flee their homes.


It took a dead baby for the world to notice. Wait, I thought it took seventy refugees suffocating in a refrigerator with wheels for the world to notice? Or was it the pictures of babies floating face down in the water that did it? I thought we were at the tipping point when chemical weapons were dropped on the Damascus Ghouta in 2013, and politicians in the Western world wobbled their lower lips as they made their speeches denouncing Assad and calling for accountability.

I don’t buy it, and I’m not getting swept away with the optimism and emotion. A few thousand refugees let in through the net aren’t going to fix this problem or make it go away. The refugee problem is mainly a Syrian refugee problem, and it stems from a dictator who continues to use barrel bomb attacks to depopulate towns and villages. Syrians aren’t fleeing because of Jabhat al Nusra or even ISIS. They’re fleeing because they can’t live safely in their towns and villages when there is a constant fear of airstrikes and barrel bombs – the most barbaric of indiscriminate weapons.

I’ve spoken to people in Syria, and they’ve told me they could put up with the odd mortar shell, sniper or tank fire. They could even put up with living in Islamic State areas or living with Jabhat al-Nusra, just about, but not a weapon that can flatten an entire building, turning it into a tomb for those unlucky enough to be trapped alive beneath it. Those who come to rescue any survivors become themselves victims with the regime’s “double tap” method, where a second barrel bomb is thrown down to get rid of the survivors. It’s diabolical, it’s perverse, and it is contrary to all morality and logic. This is what’s driving people to risk their lives and everything they have for a better one abroad.

The West lacks the political will to do anything while Assad’s allies back him to the hilt. Yes, foreign fighters have done a lot to undermine the Syrian revolution, but that pales in comparison to the material support given to Assad by Iran and Russia. It took two years for the Assad regime to realize that President Obama is actually doing everything he could *not* to touch Syria, and after that the Russians threw him a lifeline, a way out, from the corner of red lines that he’d talked himself into. The disarmament deal that was supposed to “punish” the Assad regime really just gave him a green light to use all other weapons to brutalize the Syrian people, including his air force, which is nowhere to be seen whenever Israel conducts its airstrikes inside Syria.

Today British Prime Minister David Cameron might grudgingly agree to allow a few thousand more Syrian refugees into the United Kingdom, as will Europe, but what will the world do in six months? In a year? How long will these band-aid fixes continue to be applied while everybody shirks their international obligations and does nothing to stop the slaughter in Syria?

By doing something, I’m not talking about the meaningless term “political solution”, but taking hard action to stop a dictator’s regime from tearing the entire Mediterranean apart so that he can stay on his throne. Sorry, the picture of a dead baby, however heart breaking, is not enough to sway the world’s conscience into action. People will keep risking their lives in the hope of safety and a better life, it’s human nature.

Made up of bloated corpses, blood, guts, stale semen, decayed food, sweat and petrol fumes, there is a stink rising from our Arab countries, and the world just wants to pinch its nose. The only thing this poor baby might have done is to awaken the fetid consciences of the Arab bourgeoisies, as they tweet their heartbreak over social media from across the Arab world’s glittering capitals. To them, I say shukran for your condolences and your Arabian hospitality. Oh, and can the last person out of Syria please turn off the lights?