A photograph of a toddler's lifeless body washed ashore on a Turkish beach after a migrant boat sank swept across Europe last 2 September, in a poignant image of the refugee crisis.
The images showed the little boy lying face down in the sand near Bodrum, one of Turkey's prime tourist resorts, before he was picked up by a police officer in photographs taken by the Dogan news agency.
The hashtag "#KiyiyaVuranInsanlik" ("Humanity washed ashore") made it to Twitter's top world trending topics after the image was widely shared.
The bleak image made the front page of almost all of Britain's major newspapers, including some that had previously taken a hard line on the migrant crisis.
"Tiny victim of a human catastrophe" was the Daily Mail's headline, along with a photo covering almost all of its front page.
"Unbearable" said The Mirror.
"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?" asked The Independent in an editorial which was headlined: "Somebody's child."
The paper immediately launched a petition demanding Britain accept "its fair share of refugees" which gained 10,000 signatures in hours.
London has come in for criticism over the number of refugees it has accepted which is lower than other EU countries in proportion to its population.
The Sun, which caused outcry earlier this year when it published a column comparing migrants to "cockroaches", used its front page to urged Prime Minister David Cameron to act.
"It's life and death," read the front page.
"Today The Sun urges David Cameron to help those in a life-and-death struggle not of their own making."
Speaking to AFP, a Turkish rescue worker identified the boy as Aylan Kurdi. Media reports said he was three-years-old.
He was believed to be one of at least 12 Syrian migrants who died trying to reach Greece when their boats sank in Turkish waters.
The Turkish coastguard said two boats had sunk after separately setting off from Turkey's Bodrum peninsula for the Greek Aegean island of Kos early 2 September. Among the dead were five children and a woman.
Another 15 people were rescued and the coastguard, backed by helicopters, was continuing its search for three more who were still missing, a statement said.
The images showed the little boy lying face down in the sand near Bodrum, one of Turkey's prime tourist resorts, before he was picked up by a police officer in photographs taken by the Dogan news agency.
The hashtag "#KiyiyaVuranInsanlik" ("Humanity washed ashore") made it to Twitter's top world trending topics after the image was widely shared.
The bleak image made the front page of almost all of Britain's major newspapers, including some that had previously taken a hard line on the migrant crisis.
"Tiny victim of a human catastrophe" was the Daily Mail's headline, along with a photo covering almost all of its front page.
"Unbearable" said The Mirror.
"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?" asked The Independent in an editorial which was headlined: "Somebody's child."
The paper immediately launched a petition demanding Britain accept "its fair share of refugees" which gained 10,000 signatures in hours.
London has come in for criticism over the number of refugees it has accepted which is lower than other EU countries in proportion to its population.
The Sun, which caused outcry earlier this year when it published a column comparing migrants to "cockroaches", used its front page to urged Prime Minister David Cameron to act.
"It's life and death," read the front page.
"Today The Sun urges David Cameron to help those in a life-and-death struggle not of their own making."
Speaking to AFP, a Turkish rescue worker identified the boy as Aylan Kurdi. Media reports said he was three-years-old.
He was believed to be one of at least 12 Syrian migrants who died trying to reach Greece when their boats sank in Turkish waters.
The Turkish coastguard said two boats had sunk after separately setting off from Turkey's Bodrum peninsula for the Greek Aegean island of Kos early 2 September. Among the dead were five children and a woman.
Another 15 people were rescued and the coastguard, backed by helicopters, was continuing its search for three more who were still missing, a statement said.