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‘Make their voices heard’: Turkish women fight femicide

Activists paint banners and placards as they prepare for a feminist march to mark International Women's Day in Beyoglu district in Istanbul, on March 5, 2022. Turkey's women are increasingly mobilised to stand up for their rights and demand more protection from the state, despite crackdowns against protests over a rising number of femicides. Ozan KOSE / AFP

A group of female activists prepare banners ahead of a march in İstanbul: “Keep the feminist rebellion going”, reads one, “We don’t have to stick to your taboos”, says another.

The mood is cheery, but the reason for the gathering is not.

They were readying for a rally Tuesday — International Women’s Day — to protest femicide and urge Turkey to rejoin a Europe-wide convention protecting women from violence.

“March 8 is an occasion for many women to make their voices heard,” activist Kübra Karagöz, 31, told AFP.

“The streets and squares belong to women, despite all the pressure to drive them away,” she said, kneeling down to write on a purple canvas.

‘Incompatible’

Turkey has seen a groundswell of feminist protests after President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan abruptly pulled out of the Istanbul Convention last year.

Turkey was the first country to sign the convention in 2011, which laid the way for a legal framework to tackle, prevent and prosecute violence against women.

Ankara justified the withdrawal by saying the treaty had a hidden agenda to normalize homosexuality, in part because of its broad ban on discrimination, including based on gender identity and sexual orientation.

The LGBTQ movement is “incompatible” with Turkey’s social and family values, government spokesman Fahrettin Altun said.

The move is still haunting women who complain of being deprived of legal guarantees in Turkey, where females won the right to vote in national elections in 1934 — well ahead of many European nations and 10 years before France.

The pull-out has prompted huge demonstrations, some that have seen clashes with police spraying tear gas at protesters.

The majority of women in the country are familiar with the treaty, according to Canan Güllü, who heads the Federation of Women’s Associations of Turkey.

“For us, it’s still in place,” she says.

‘Volunteer activists’

Turkey has seen an uptick in femicides in recent years.

Last year, 416 women were killed, according to the We Will Stop Femicide Platform. So far this year, 72 have been killed.

Many are murdered by partners and relatives, and some have sparked uproar.

In February this year, Hüseyin Can Gökçek murdered his 16-year-old fiancée Sıla Şentürk in the northern city of Giresun after her family allegedly forced her into the relationship.

Well-known screenwriter Gani Müjde joined a chorus of condemnation, saying those who let her be killed should “drown in the blood of child brides.”

“Let the light in this girl’s eyes blind those who got the 16-year-old engaged and left her alone with her murderer,” Müjde said.

Güllü said women are now at the forefront of the battle for better protection.

“The women’s movement has achieved social awareness, which is our pride, the result of standing upright,” she told AFP.

“We don’t have a mercenary army. We are not putting anyone out on the street by giving out money. There are volunteer activists from all sides in this movement.”

‘Escape from justice’

In the wake of the Istanbul Convention withdrawal, Erdoğan has promised a legal reform package of hefty sentences for violence against women.

The bill will come to full parliament floor “as soon as possible,” he said at a women’s event last week.

But activists say it’s not enough, and want the convention restored.

“There’s no point in stiffening penalties. Our problem is that the laws are not being implemented,” said Elif Ege, 35, who describes herself as an independent feminist.

Human rights lawyer Nesibe Kırış said the withdrawal sends a clear message to perpetrators, offering “an escape from justice, and legitimacy to commit such crimes.”

But she added that women are more mobilized than ever to “influence society and politicians and thus impact judicial rulings.”

For Güllü, the battle may be uphill, but she insists that violence “is not destiny.”

“Women are the homeland of women. We will support each other. We’ll remind women they are not helpless,” she said.

“We will stand side-by-side, shoulder-to-shoulder, and win this fight.”

AFP

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