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Prosecutor shoots female judge at İstanbul courthouse

A female judge was shot Tuesday at an İstanbul courthouse by a public prosecutor, who was prevented from firing a second shot by a day-release prisoner serving tea, Turkish media reported.

The incident took place inside a courthouse on the Asian side of İstanbul at around 1:00 pm (1000 GMT), the DHA news agency said.

Judge Aslı Kahraman sustained serious injuries when, Muhammet Çağatay Kılıçaslan, opened fire, hitting her in the groin, the Sözcü newspaper reported.

Reports said the pair had been romantically involved but not married, as initially reported.

Public prosecutor Muhammet Çağatay Kılıçaslan

Kılıçaslan was about to fire again but was stopped by a man who was serving tea, a convict out on day release who was working at the courthouse, both sources said.

Kahraman received first aid at the scene before being rushed to hospital, where she was said to be in stable condition.

Kılıçaslan was detained and was due to appear at İstanbul’s main courthouse later on Tuesday, Sözcü said.

The incident drew sharp condemnation from the We Will Stop Femicide platform.

“A female judge was shot with a firearm by … a prosecutor, in full view of everyone at the İstanbul Kartal Anatolian Courthouse, the very place where perpetrators should be punished,” it said in a statement on X.

“Women can be shot with firearms even inside courthouses.”

Turkey does not collate official figures on femicides, leaving the job to women’s organizations that collect data on murders and other suspicious deaths from press reports.

Figures compiled by We Will Stop Femicides show that in 2025, 294 women were killed by men and 297 women were found dead under suspicious circumstances.

Of that number, just over one in three, or 35 percent, were killed by their husbands, while 57 percent were killed with firearms.

Rights groups say the deaths classed as suspicious or as suicide in Turkey has risen since Ankara withdrew from an international convention on violence against women in 2021.

That agreement, popularly known as the Istanbul Convention, requires countries to pass laws aimed at preventing and prosecuting violence against women.

© Agence France-Presse

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