TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「On a cold morning in December 2015, when Walid Khalil Murad realized the smuggler’s boat had gone under off the coast of Greece with his family still trapped in the cabin, he tried to tug off the life jacket that kept him afloat as he drifted away. A friend shouted at him to stop. Murad, 34, who owned two shops in the Iraqi city of Sinjar before Islamic State fighters forced him to take his family and flee, has never seen three-year-old Nishtiman, her brothers Nashwan, 5, and Nashat, 6, or his wife Jinar again. “Sometimes I talk to myself—I literally talk to myself—and say ‘maybe, just maybe, they are still alive,'" he says, "then I say to myself immediately after that, ‘but the sea was very difficult, they did not have a chance.’” There are many obstacles standing between Murad, who was resettled in #Germany, and the truth: chaotic record-keeping in countries where bodies wash up on beaches; an apathetic public; far-right governments with no interest in the plight of #refugees. Now there is also some hope for the relatives of the 21,000 people who have died or gone missing trying to cross the #Mediterranean since 2011. After years of lobbying, an international organization has persuaded some countries to start work on identifying the dead using DNA #technology. But behind this outwardly simple effort, reports Charlotte McDonald-Gibson, are layers of institutional and political complexities, which are threatening the future of the project before it has even properly started. In these photographs: Murad sits in the foyer of his German language school on July 25; the only photograph of his family; his apartment on the second floor of a house in Theley; and pigeons that he takes care of. Read more at the link in bio. Photographs by @mustafahabdulaziz for TIME」8月13日 3時24分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 8月13日 03時24分


On a cold morning in December 2015, when Walid Khalil Murad realized the smuggler’s boat had gone under off the coast of Greece with his family still trapped in the cabin, he tried to tug off the life jacket that kept him afloat as he drifted away. A friend shouted at him to stop. Murad, 34, who owned two shops in the Iraqi city of Sinjar before Islamic State fighters forced him to take his family and flee, has never seen three-year-old Nishtiman, her brothers Nashwan, 5, and Nashat, 6, or his wife Jinar again. “Sometimes I talk to myself—I literally talk to myself—and say ‘maybe, just maybe, they are still alive,'" he says, "then I say to myself immediately after that, ‘but the sea was very difficult, they did not have a chance.’” There are many obstacles standing between Murad, who was resettled in #Germany, and the truth: chaotic record-keeping in countries where bodies wash up on beaches; an apathetic public; far-right governments with no interest in the plight of #refugees. Now there is also some hope for the relatives of the 21,000 people who have died or gone missing trying to cross the #Mediterranean since 2011. After years of lobbying, an international organization has persuaded some countries to start work on identifying the dead using DNA #technology. But behind this outwardly simple effort, reports Charlotte McDonald-Gibson, are layers of institutional and political complexities, which are threatening the future of the project before it has even properly started. In these photographs: Murad sits in the foyer of his German language school on July 25; the only photograph of his family; his apartment on the second floor of a house in Theley; and pigeons that he takes care of. Read more at the link in bio. Photographs by @mustafahabdulaziz for TIME


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