Women prepare to protest as Turkey weighs withdrawal from Istanbul Convention
As
conservative media and ruling Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP)
officials discuss Turkey’s withdrawal from a council of Europe human rights
treaty against domestic and gender-based violence, Turkey’s women are calling
for a demonstration on Sunday to protest domestic and sexual violence against
women and children.
“We will keep our distance, we will wear our masks
and we will meet at the protest,’’ Fidan Ataselim from the We Will Stop
Femicides Platform (KCDP) tweeted on Saturday.
The KCDP and Women’s Assemblies, an umbrella
organisation for women's rights advocacy, are calling for a simultaneous
demonstration across 13 provinces to protest the proposed changes to a law on
child sexual abuse, in addition to a better implementation of the Istanbul
Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence Against Women and Domestic
Violence.
There will be gatherings in Ankara, Istanbul, Izmir,
Bursa, Muğla, Kayseri, Samsun, Mersin, Eskişehir,
Çorum, Kocaeli, Antalya
and Kütahya, Women’s Assemblies announced.
The call is spread through social media, under hash
tags that read, “Istanbul Convention saves lives,” and “Istanbul Convention is
a must.”
The Istanbul Convention and Turkish Law No.6284 for
protection of the family and prevention of violence against women call for
increased support services for women and children, including rape crisis
centres and women’s shelters. The legislation allows for women subjected to
domestic or sexual violence to take more effective action against their abusers
while discouraging gendered bias in law enforcement and court systems.
The KCDP warns that the number of femicides in the
country has increased under lockdown and curfew conditions implemented as part
of Turkey’s fight against the coronavirus pandemic, with women losing access to
both legal and familial support networks.
In the first 10 days of June, 10 women were killed
throughout Turkey, KCDP said.
“Throughout the pandemic, most women (who were
killed) were killed in their homes,” a previous statement said. “With the
normalisation, the number of femicides rose. Life did not go back to normal for
women.”
Eleven out of 21 women killed in May were killed by
firearms, mostly by their partners, according to KCDP.
“When we ask why they could not solve the femicide
issue, this country’s Justice Minister cannot answer us,’’ the KCDP said. “He
speaks of the orders and laws they pushed out. It is not enough to put out
laws, to make regulations. You have to effectively implement the Istanbul
Convention and the Law No. 6284, and keep women alive.”
The Council of Europe in April urged signatory
states to take care in implementing the convention, warning of potential
increase in violence against women during times of crisis.
Turkey’s conservative media has long stood against
the convention and the law, but recently AKP officials have started to discuss
the possibility of withdrawing from the Istanbul Convention and annulling the
Law No.6284, an initiative kick-started by AKP Deputy Chairman Numan Kurtulmuş.
“Just as we fulfilled the requirements and signed
it, we can fulfil the requirements and leave,” Kurtulmuş
said on July 2.
Pro-government newspaper Türkiye said on Wednesday
that during an AKP central committee meeting, Erdoğan
pointed to Bulgaria, Croatia and Hungary, which all withdrew from the
convention over concerns on LGBT rights, saying that he too favoured Turkey’s withdrawal as well.
Justice Minister Abdülhamit Gül said was in favour
of a withdrawal and Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu
described how the withdrawal process would be undertaken.
The Istanbul Convention, contrary to mainstream
conservative opposition to its content, does not explicitly promote LGBT
rights, but bans discrimination in access to public services and support
services regarding gendered violence. The convention also stipulates that
cultural elements cannot be accepted as defence during trials related to
gendered violence, such as honour killings or what is colloquially known as the
“gay panic defence,” where a defendant says they did not know their partner had
been male.
“We object to homosexuality and the (notion
of) genderlessness that LGBT lobbies try to legitimise and spread throughout
the world,” chairwoman of the pro-AKP Women and Democracy Association (KADEM)
Saliha Okur said in an interview on July 10. “However, the convention mentions
sexual orientation because it stands against violence.
“It says that regardless of a person’s language,
race, identity, refugee status, whether they are men, women or children, even
if they have a different sexual orientation, states must protect them from
violence,” Okur said.
Remaining a signatory of the convention “does not
necessarily mean a move to empower homosexuality or the LGBT lobby,” she added,
and even if Turkey withdraws from the convention, it must continue the fight
against violence, and a withdrawal “must not mean a weakening of the fight
against violence.”
“It won’t be that easy to withdraw from this,” Tülay
Korkutan and Tuana Öztuncer, university students whose women’s groups occupied
the Family Ministry on July 7, told Mezopotamya news agency. “The Istanbul
Convention guarantees our lives.”
AKP “had not signed the convention all that
voluntarily,” the women said, “it went into effect thanks to the women’s
movement.”
“Withdrawing from the Istanbul Convention is
murder,” pro-Kurdish opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) deputy Serpil
Kemalbay told Mezopotamya.
“AKP wishes to shape society through the type of
woman they approve of,” Kemalbay said, while imposing conservative values on
society.
Such moves would “take society back decades,” she
added.
Main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP)
deputy İbrahim
Kaboğlu,
an expert on constitutional law, told news website Duvar that the convention
was based on a human rights understanding that “thinks globally, acts locally,” and is thus “an immensely valuable
document for Turkey.”
“Turkey’s policy on women’s rights is a policy
beyond political parties and governments,” Kaboğlu
said. What has allowed Turkey to implement democracy has been its secular
nature, despite the overwhelming majority of its population being from the same
religion, and the upholding of women’s rights, according to the opposition
lawmaker.
Turkey should be proud of getting behind the
convention, Kaboğlu said, adding, “Turkey has a
responsibility and the honour to fulfil the requirements of this document, and
be an inspiration for all, and other Muslim societies in particular.”
CHP Deputy Chairwoman Lale Karabıyık said discussing
the validity of the Istanbul Convention threatens all women, as it covers
different types of violence such as psychological and physical violence,
stalking, sexual assault and rape, forced marriage, female genital mutilation,
forced abortions, forced sterilisations and sexual violence.
The convention does not vilify traditions, but says
religious violence and honour killings are not acceptable, Karabıyık said.




