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Turkey pulls out of landmark treaty protecting women from violence

A demonstrator wearing a protective face masks holds up a placard reading 'Stand up against violence towards women' during a demonstration for a better implementation of the Istanbul Convention and the Turkish Law 6284 for the protection of the family and prevention of violence against women, in Istanbul, Turkey, on August 5, 2020. - Thousands of women in Turkey took to the streets on August 5 to demand that the government does not withdraw from a landmark treaty on preventing domestic violence. (Photo by Yasin AKGUL / AFP)

Turkey on Saturday pulled out of the world’s first binding treaty to prevent and combat violence against women by presidential decree, in the latest victory for conservatives in President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), Agence France-Presse reported.

The 2011 Istanbul Convention, signed by 45 countries and the European Union, requires governments to adopt legislation prosecuting domestic violence and similar abuse as well as marital rape and female genital mutilation.

Conservatives had claimed the charter damages family unity, encourages divorce and that its references to equality were being used by the LGBT community to gain broader acceptance in society.

The publication of the decree in the official gazette early Saturday sparked anger among rights groups and calls for protests in İstanbul.

Gökçe Gökçen, deputy chairperson of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), said abandoning the treaty meant “keeping women second class citizens and letting them be killed.”

“Despite you and your evil, we will stay alive and bring back the convention,” she said on Twitter.

Turkey had been debating a possible departure after an official in Erdoğan’s party raised dropping the treaty last year.

Since then, women have taken to the streets in cities across the country calling on the government to stick to the convention.

Labour and Social Services Minister Zehra Zümrüt Selçuk told the official Anadolu news agency that Turkey’s constitution and domestic regulations would instead be the “guarantee of the women’s rights.”

“We will continue our fight against violence with the principle of zero tolerance,” she said on Saturday.

‘Collective fight’

Domestic violence and femicide remain serious problems in Turkey.

A man was arrested on Sunday in the north of the country after a video on social media purportedly showing him beating his ex-wife on a street sparked outrage.

Last year, 300 women were murdered according to the rights group We Will Stop Femicide Platform.

The platform called for a “collective fight against those who dropped the Istanbul convention,” in a message on Twitter.

“The Istanbul Convention was not signed at your command and it will not leave our lives on your command,” its secretary-general Fidan Ataselim tweeted.

She called on women to protest in Kadıköy on the Asian side of İstanbul on Saturday.

“Withdraw the decision, implement the convention,” she tweeted.

Kerem Altıparmak, an academic and lawyer specializing in human rights law, likened the government’s shredding of the convention to the 1980 military coup.

“What’s abolished tonight is not only the Istanbul Convention but the parliament’s will and legislative power,” he commented.

Rights groups accuse Erdoğan of taking mostly Muslim but officially secular Turkey on an increasingly socially conservative course during his 18 years in power.

After a spectacular Pride March in Istanbul drew 100,000 people in 2014, the government responded by banning future events in the city, citing security concerns.

And in January Turkish police detained four people after artwork depicting Islam’s holiest site viewed as offensive by Ankara was hung at an Istanbul university at the center of recent protests.

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