LESBOS, Greece (AP) — An autumn chill had set in and winds were blowing at 30 miles per hour (50 kph) when the wooden boat, packed with families from Syria and Iraq, set out on the short crossing from Turkey to the Greek island of Lesbos and the promise of a new life in Europe. Partway across, it capsized, triggering a scene of panic, confusion — and compassion — in a dramatic rescue recorded on video from a boat involved in the operation. Another man looked urgently for signs of life in a limp, dark-haired toddler wearing a colorful striped top. Blanket-wrapped survivors sat in a quayside square scattered with discarded shoes, boxes of clothes and a mound of orange lifejackets. Manolis Galanakis, a local fisherman, said the actions of people smugglers who loaded the boats were "a crime against humanity."