Robert Spencer : The Platform’s annual report
said that 24 women had a restraining or protection order against those
men who would eventually murder them. 9 women made a complaint with the
police or prosecutor’s office prior to their killings. 30 of the
murdered women were in the process of a divorce. The organization had no
data as to whether 251 of the women killed in 2021 had had a protection
order against their murderers.
According to the report, 4 percent of the victims were killed for
economic reasons. 65 percent were killed for a reason that could not be
found. 31 percent were killed for wanting to make a decision about their
own lives.
Almost all women were murdered by someone they knew. Only 6 percent
were murdered by a stranger, unidentified persons, or others. 44 percent
of the victims were murdered by their husbands. The rest were murdered
by their boyfriends, acquaintances, ex-husbands, relatives, fathers,
ex-boyfriends, sons, or brothers.
Some examples of the murders include:
- Celal Serçe slit the throat of Nebahat Er, 35, in the city of Kocaeli for breaking up with him.
- Gülser Uyar, 77, was shot to death in her sleep by her husband, Ali Kemal Uyar, in Bursa.
- Rukiye Akgül, 31, was killed in Antalya by her husband, Emrah Akgül, who hit her on the head with an iron bar.
- Derya
Damla Yurdakul, 24, was stabbed to death by her husband, Süleyman
Yurdakul, in Ankara. It turned out that Derya had a restraining order
against the perpetrator and that the perpetrator came to his house with
the excuse of reconciliation.
- Selva El Hinedi, 22, was stabbed
in the back and chest by Ayad El Hasan in the middle of the street in
the city of Urfa while she was going to the hospital, where she worked
as a translator. It turned out that the perpetrator killed Selva because
she did not accept his marriage proposal.
The “We Will Stop Femicide Platform”
has many branches across Turkey. They monitor violence against women
throughout the country, preparing monthly and annual reports. They
provide legal support to women who need protection from violence. They
try to solve legal problems related to this violence, urging the
authorities to enact laws in support of women, and actively participate
in the law-making processes. They participate in related murder trials
alongside the families of the victims and call on the judiciary to
properly implement existing laws to secure justice for the victims, as
well as those women who are still alive. They convey their views and
solution proposals to Turkey’s parliament and organize trainings for
women which educate them about their rights. They regularly engage with
the media, trying to create social awareness and public opinion.
So how has the Turkish government responded in the face of this
epidemic of deadly violence against women? Has it started a nationwide
campaign to educate its citizens concerning women’s rights and gender
equality? Has it enacted laws to protect women and punish the
perpetrators effectively? Has it opened an emergency office with the
participation of women’s rights groups including the “We Will Stop
Femicide Platform” to provide much needed help to women exposed to
violence, threatened, or abused by men?
No, Turkish government authorities have done none of that.
Instead, the Turkish government is rigorously devoting its time
against an organization that aims to help the victims. The “We Will Stop
Femicide Platform” announced on April 13 that a lawsuit was filed
against them on the charge of “conducting illegal and immoral
activities”. The Istanbul Public Prosecutor’s Office filed the lawsuit
at the request of the Associations’ Desk of the Ministry of the Interior
and the Istanbul Governor’s Office.
What could be behind this act by the Turkey’s Islamist government?
Of course, violence against women is not restricted to any region or
country; it is an issue that affects women and girls in many places
across the world in varying degrees. However, its intensity in the
Muslim world, the impunity that many perpetrators enjoy, and the
systematic inequality of men and women in countries governed according
to Sharia law, highlights the Islamic causes behind the violence and
other abuses against women.
Islam teaches that a woman is worth less than a man in many fields such as inheritance, court testimony, divorce, and even intelligence. According to Islamic scriptures, men are in charge of women. Islam even allows a man to beat his wife. According to the Hadith, Islam’s prophet Muhammad physically struck Aisha, one of his wives, for leaving the house without his permission.
Perhaps, Islam’s most dehumanizing teaching about women is its approval of sexual slavery. Islamic teachings clearly allow Muslim men to keep women as sex slaves.
The grave situation of women’s rights in Muslim countries is a
testimony to Islam’s influence on the deterioration of the lives of
millions of girls and women. The book
“The Islamic Doctrine of Women (A Taste of Islam)” by Dr. Bill Warner
meticulously details how according to the Islamic law, “women are to be
subjugated to men in all things.”
This does not mean that every single act of violence, abuse, or
murder of women by Muslim men is inspired or motivated by Islamic
teachings. It also does not mean that only the women in the Muslim world
are exposed to violence at the hands of men.
However, it is evident that these Islamic teachings that see women as
less than fully human and that condone violating women’s most basic
human rights have shaped the way that Muslim culture generally views and
treats women. How else could one explain that the Islamist government
of Turkey has launched a lawsuit to close a women’s rights organization
that only aims to end murders against women?
Uzay Bulut is a Turkish journalist and political analyst formerly based in Ankara.