Ahead of a UK exhibition of her photo series Journey in the Death Boat, Güliz Vural describes travelling with Syrians being smuggled to Greece from Turkey

Standing on a Turkish beach ready to join a group of Syrian refugees on an inflatable boat bound for Greece, the photojournalist Güliz Vural’s biggest fear was that the people traffickers organising the illegal crossing would not let her onboard.

If she had known that within a few hours of leaving Turkey she would be under arrest, accused of people trafficking herself, she would have thought twice about the journey.

The migrants carry the inflatable boat they will travel in down to the beach. They had to leave all their possessions as they crammed themselves in. Nearly 50 Syrians made the crossing in a boat designed to carry 12 people, adding to the anxiety felt by the children in particular.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘The ghost PM’: what the papers say about Liz Truss’s hold on power

The UK newspaper front pages cover the Chancellor’s tax cut reversals as…

Covid spread as overcrowding doubles among private renters in England

Ethnic minorities worst affected as pandemic forces households to take in extra…

Johnson urges caution as England takes first big step out of lockdown

Outdoor group socialising allowed from Monday but ad campaign stresses Covid risks…