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Pues eso, que la icónica familia de "refugiados sirios" que hace 7 meses supuestamente huían de la guerra de Siria y cuya foto ha sido premio Pulitzer 2016 resulta que no eran sirios y que han vuelto voluntariamente a su país, Irak.
B. Torres Gotay op Twitter: "Aquí, una de las fotos que ganó el #Pulitzer. De las mejores de la historia, comparable a la de la chica en Vietnam https://t.co/sMqhiAanKZ"
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“Famous Refugees” Back in Iraq
April 25, 2016
Proof that there is no “refugee” crisis—but only a determined, liberal-driven, nonwhite invasion of Europe—has come with the news that the Iraqi “refugee” family made famous in a press photograph have returned to Iraq after only six months in Germany. The family—Laith Majid; his wife, Nada Adel; their sons Moustafa, aged 18; Ahmed, 17; and Taha, nine; along with seven-year-old daughter Nour—landed on the island of Kos in August 2015, at the height of the Angela Merkel-inspired nonwhite invasion. A press photographer snapped the now famous picture of Majid weeping as he carried his youngest daughter off the boat. The image was seized upon by the controlled media to portray the “desperation” of the “refugees” who would “give up everything to seek safety in Europe.” As the Bild newspaper in Germany reported in September 2015, the family had “arrived” in Berlin, and were “finally happy. They hope to live in peace, and to work,” the Bild enthused. (“Their photo goes around the world: now they are in Berlin,” Bild, September 7, 2015).
The Bild assured its readers that “as Sunnis in Shiite-ruled Iraq, they had received death threats,” and had to “sell everything to flee.” Neda Majid was quoted by Bild as saying about their “new home: that ‘the Queen of Germany, Angela Merkel, is very good. She is like a mother to us.’” As a result of the press picture, the Majid family gave more than 100 press interviews in Berlin, to media from all over the world. Their story of “escaping from terror” and the “lifesaving efforts of Queen Merkel” became the standard “refugee” fare for the controlled media. As a result, the Majids became the “most famous”—and certainly the most-quoted—“refugees” in the world.
Now, however, it appears that the whole farce has collapsed.
The Bild newspaper decided to interview the Majid family once again to find out how they were doing in Germany six months after escaping the “hell” and “death threats” of Baghdad. Their findings shocked even that pro-invasion newspaper: the Majid family was back in Iraq, safe and sound—even though they had claimed all along that their “lives were in danger.” (“World-famous refugee family is back in Iraq,” Bild, April 23, 2016). The Bild explained that it was a struggle to find out where the Majids had gone. “It was as if the earth had swallowed them up. The mobile phone number no longer worked, and no one know where they were, not at the Schmidt-Knobelsdorf barracks in Spandau where they had been staying, nor the State Department of Health and Welfare.”
However, Bild eventually found them: “Their location was shocking: All are back in Iraq, the land that they had left under mortal danger.” Obviously not satisfied with “refugee” life in Berlin, they had simply flown back on one of the weekly flights from Berlin to the Iraqi capital. Every Wednesday there are direct connections from Tegel airport in Berlin to Baghdad, which cost about €300 per person. The Majids packed their bags, “found” the money to buy their tickets home, and now live in the town of Erbil in Iraq, Bild revealed. True to form, the Bild called their decision to return a “sad end to a perilous journey”—and not, what it actually is, proof that they were never “refugees” in the first place.
http://newobserveronline.com/famous-refugees-back-iraq/
Kein Happy End: Berühmte Flüchtlingsfamilie zurück im Irak - DIE WELT
Schicksalsschlag: Flüchtlingsfamilie von Pulitzerpreis-Foto kehrt zurück in den Irak | Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger
Ihr Foto ging um die Welt
Warum sehe ich Bild.de nicht - Bild.de
http://www.tio.ch/News/Estero/Attualita/1082228/Il-profugo-piu-famoso-del-mondo-e-tornato-in-Iraq/
20-04-2016
Mira las fotos ganadoras del premio Pulitzer 2016
Laith Majid, un iraquí, rompe en llanto mientras abraza a sus hijos tras haber llegado a salvo a Kos, en Grecia, en una endeble embarcación plástica.
http://www.elciudadano.cl/2016/04/20/277726/mira-las-fotos-ganadoras-del-premio-pulitzer-
08/09/2015
El refugiado sirio que emocionó a Facebook cumple su sueño
Laith Majid y su familia han encontrado asilo en Berlín, después de que su rostro lloroso se hiciera viral en Facebook
http://www.abc.es/recreo/20150908/abci-facebook-refugiado-sirio-encuentra-201509081418.html
21 agosto 2015
La emotiva historia tras esta fotografía de un padre sirio
Laith Majid huía de Siria junto a su mujer y sus dos hijos para refugiarse en Alemania de la terrible situación de su país
http://www.elcorreo.com/alava/sociedad/201508/21/emotiva-historia-tras-esta-20150821162849.html
08/09/2015
Laith Majid, el padre de familia que emocionó al mundo, pisa Berlín. Su imagen se ha convertido en otra fotografía icónica de la crisis humanitaria
Es el caso de Laith Majid, un padre de familia sirio que fue fotografiado al llegar a la isla de Kos, en Grecia. Sostenía en brazos a sus hijos y a su mujer mientras lloraba de emoción. Habían sobrevivido a un agotador trayecto en una precaria balsa hinchable por el que pagaron cerca de 6.500 dólares. Pero el viaje continuaba. Esta semana Majid y los suyos han pisado por fin territorio alemán.
http://www.lavanguardia.com/internacional/20150908/54436346965/laith-majid-padre-familia-berlin.html
09 de septiembre de 2015
Laith Majid y su familia ya están a salvo en Berlín
Su llegada a la isla de Kos es otra de las imágenes que dejó el drama de los sirios
http://www.lavozdegalicia.es/notici...-familia-salvo-berlin/0003_201509G9P23991.htm
August 21, 2015
The story behind the heartbreaking photo of refugee family shared by thousands
http://www.smh.com.au/world/the-sto...mily-shared-by-thousands-20150820-gj3yi0.html
7 Sep 2015
Safe at last! Crying refugee dad pictured holding his child on Greek beach starts new life in Germany
The image of English teacher Laith Majid from Syria clutching one of his children to his chest as they arrived in Greece went around the world
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/safe-last-crying-refugee-dad-6401122
8-09-2015
Syrian man pictured crying as his family landed in Greece finds refuge in Germany
Laith Majid and his family have arrived in Berlin, after images of the father tearfully clutching his children sparked awareness of Europe’s refugee crisis
http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...mily-landed-in-greece-finds-refuge-in-germany
21-08-2015
This poignant photo captures the harsh reality of life for thousands of migrants
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/21/photo-migrants-laith-majid-journeys
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