The haunting image of Abdullah Kurdi's three-year-old son, Aylan Kurdi, washed up on a Turkish beach has become a vital symbol of the refugee crisis fuelled by war and deprivation.
A convoy of vehicles crossed into Kobane from the Turkish border town of Suruc on Friday.
Legislators from Turkey accompanied Kurdi to Kobane. Journalists and well-wishers were stopped at a checkpoint some three kilometres from the border.
Aylan drowned along with his 5-year-old brother Galip and his mother, Rehan while trying to reach the island of Kos.
Suspected traffickers
Turkish authorities have arrested four suspected traffickers over the deaths of 12 Syrian refugees in two boat sinkings, including that of the Kudi family, a report said on Thursday.
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Earlier, the father of the Kurdi brothers said he wants the international attention on his sons' deaths to focus on preventing similar incidents from happening again.
"We want the world's attention on us, so that they can prevent the same from happening to others. Let this be the last," Kurdi said on Thursday.
In a
statement to police obtained by the Hurriyet newspaper, Abdullah said he
had twice paid smugglers to take him and his family to Greece but their
efforts had failed.
They had then decided to find a boat and row themselves but it began
to take in water and when people stood up in panic, it capsized."I was holding my wife's hand. My children slipped away from my hands. We tried to hold on to the boat," he said in the statement. "Everyone was screaming in pitch darkness. I couldn't make my voice heard to my wife and kids."'
The image of Aylan, drowned off one of Turkey's most popular holiday resorts, went viral on social media and piled pressure on European leaders to do more to help refugees.
Heart-rending pictures of the toddler's lifeless body put a human face on the dangers faced by tens of thousands of desperate people who risk their lives to seek safety in Europe.
"If these extraordinarily powerful images of a dead Syrian child washed up on a beach don't change Europe's attitude to refugees, what will?" Britain's Independent said in remarks echoed in newspapers across the continent.
Over the past week, there has been a dramatic spike in the numbers of refugees - mainly from Syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Africa - seeking to leave Turkey by sea for Greece in the hope of building new lives in the European Union.
Source: Al Jazeera And Agencies