Even the Wall Street Journal can gets its geography in a twist, it seems. This necessitates them putting words/interpretation in someone's mouth, to make the error fit his words
--------------WSJ---------------
“From now on, I will live (in Kobani) too. I want to be buried with my family,” he said outside the morgue in the nearby town of Mugla.
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Mugla was in Turkey, last I recall. I REPEAT he has not "crossed the border back into Syria" (see earlier posts on this thread)
-------------WSJ---------------
Mr. Kurdi brought his family to Turkey three years ago after fleeing fighting first in Damascus, where he worked as a barber, then in Aleppo, then Kobani. His Facebook page shows pictures of the family in Istanbul crossing the Bosporus and feeding pigeons next to the famous Yeni Cami, or new mosque.
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http://www.wsj.com/articles/image-of-syrian-boy-washed-up-on-beach-hits-hard-1441282847
Hmm. If you've crossed the Bosphorous and been around Istanbul, surely you can get to Greece on foot, from there?
I keep wanting to ask, if they've got thousands of dollars to pay to smugglers, what the heck is stopping them from getting on a plane but it's a dumb question and I already know the answer(s).
p.s.
This one also mentions the family spending three years living in Turkey but does not cite its sources and only the header/footer and margins make the page look in any way professionally made. I hesitate to count it as a reliable source.
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=a9a_1441363187
yaDa Milli article would be a third but I haven't stopped to look at it.