Nearly five years after Europe’s conscience was stung by the image of a young Syrian refugee’s lifeless body washed up on a beach, another Syrian boy drowned on Monday when a dinghy filled with refugees and asylum-seekers fleeing Turkey for the safety of Greece capsized in the Aegean Sea. Unlike in 2015, when the horrifying images of 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi face down in the Turkish sand prompted an immediate outpouring of sympathy for the plight of Syrian refugees, the drowning of the 6-year-old off the Greek island of Lesvos this week has attracted little attention. One reason is that the political climate in Europe and the United States has changed dramatically since then, as political leaders who offered shelter to Syrians fleeing chaos at home have been either replaced or cowed into closing their borders by a xenophobic, populist backlash. Another factor is that no photographs of the victim have emerged. Instead, coverage of the tense stand-off between Greece and Turkey over which side is to blame for the appalling treatment of refugees and migrants at their land and sea borders has been illustrated by selectively edited video clips released by the two governments. On Monday, as news of the boy’s death was reported, Greek officials released video of its own coast guard officers screaming “Go back!” at a dinghy filled with migrants and refugees in the eastern Aegean.

The Greek news site Kathimerini reported that coast guard officials said that the dinghy seen in the footage was the same one that later capsized off the coast of Lesvos, killing the young boy. According to Greece, the video showed that a nearby Turkish patrol boat seen in the background had “escorted” the migrant craft to Greek waters, in concert with people smugglers. Turkish officials responded by sending news organizations their own video, which showed a Greek coast guard ship and patrol boat repelling a different migrant dinghy, forcing it back with poles and firing warning shots into the sea.

NEW: The Turkish authorities have sent us this video which they claim was filmed at 0726 this morning off Bodrum. It shows Greek coastguard carrying out ‘pushbacks’ of migrant dinghies. Shots are also fired into the water. More @SkyNews pic.twitter.com/GrlXGNIRTt — Mark Stone (@Stone_SkyNews) March 2, 2020

Despite some confusion over the two video clips, it was clear that each showed a different boat, since the dinghy seen in the Turkish footage had black markings on it, whereas the one seen in the Greek footage did not. Greece’s new right-wing prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, said in a statement after a phone call with President Donald Trump that the American leader had voiced support for his government’s decision to shut its border and stop accepting asylum claims from anyone who entered its territory illegally, despite a surge in Syrians fleeing their homes during a government offensive on the rebel-held territory of Idlib. Trump, the Greek prime minister’s office said, “recognized the right of Greece to enforce the law on its borders.” Since December, nearly a million Syrians have been displaced by the Syrian government offensive on the final pocket of rebel-controlled territory in Idlib. Turkey, which already shelters millions of Syrians, has pressed Europe to help share the burden by opening its borders with Greece to refugees and asylum-seekers.