By New Age Islam Special Correspondent
29 March 2021
In a move that has delivered a severe blow to the
human rights of women in Turkey, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
announced Turkey's withdrawal from the historic Istanbul Convention on crimes
against women through a Presidential decree on 21 March 2021. This has sparked
large scale protests by the women of the country who believe that this
withdrawal will undermine their fight for gender justice and to prevent crimes
against women. Rights activists, lawyers and liberal opposition leaders have
condemned Erdogan's move. They said that Erdogan cannot take the country out of
an international treaty that was ratified by Parliament. UN experts on Human
Rights tweeted that Turkey's withdrawal from Istanbul Convention 'is a pushback
against women's rights and a very worrying step backwards'.
The Convention had sought to criminalise offences such
as psychological violence, sexual violence, forced marriage, Female Genital
Mutilation, forced marriage, forced sterilisation, sexual harassment and honour
killing.
The Article 4 of the Treaty says:
"The implementation of the provisions of this
Convention by the Parties in particular measure to protect the right of victims
shall be secured without discrimination on any ground such as sex, gender,
race, colour, language, political or other opinion, national or social origin,
associatiin with a national minority, property, birth, sexual orientation,
gender identity, marital status, migrant or refugee status or other
status."
The Convention had come into effect in 2014 and
Erdogan had praised the participation of his country in the Convention by
saying that Turkey had taken the lead in the fight for gender equality. But
after 7 years, his political compulsions and Islamist ambitions have forced him
to change his outlook. Hence Turkey's withdrawal. Erdogan's spokesperson
Ferhettin Altun defended Erdogan's decision saying that under the guise of
fighting for the rights of women 'a group of people was attempting to normalise
homosexuality which was not compatible with Turkey's social and family values.
But is it the only reason for Erdogan's withdrawal
from the Convention? A closer look at the provisions of the convention makes it
clear that anti-LGBT stand was only a facade behind the real motive of
protecting the tribal custom of honour killing, FGM, and forced marriage in the
name of protecting family values of Turkey and political agenda of the
suppression of Kurdish minority under pressure from the conservative leaders in
his own AKP and his allies in the National Movement Party.
Of late there has been pressure from his allies to ban
the pro-Kurd political party HDP. On 17 March the Turkish Prosecutor asked the
Constitutional Court to ban the HDP and dissolve the party in Parliament.
Erdogan had earlier claimed that the HDP was a political front of the banned
Kurd militants. That the withdrawal decree came only 4 days later speaks about
the main motive behind the withdrawal. The Convention is an obstacle in this
way as the Convention asks the signatory countries to protect its minority
communities and their social and political rights.
Honour killing is a major social evil plaguing the
country. This evil does not have any basis in Islam but is rooted in the tribal
cultural mores of the Turkish society. After joining the Istanbul Convention,
Turkey had strengthened punishment for honour crimes. This was a severe blow to
the patriarchal society of Turkey and there was a constant pressure on the
government to ease the punishments for honour crimes. In Turkey, thousands of
women are killed every year by their close relatives in the name of honour.
The National Assembly of Turkey had published
statistics on crimes against women. According to this official report, 1091
women had been killed for honour between 2000- 2005. In many cases deaths or
murders were registered as accidents or suicides.
Many girls are killed because they oppose marriage
with a boy she do not like. 29% girls or women were killed for honour, 29% were
killed due to disagreement within the family, 15% were killed due to
extramarital affair and 9% were killed due to sexual harassment.
These statistics showed the severity of crimes against
women in Turkey. But instead of trying to launch programmes to bring about
social reform and change in the general outlook of the society towards women's
issues, Erdogan withdrew from Istanbul Convention to appease the allies.
The UN independent experts and social rapporteurs have
urged Erdogan to reconsider its decision and engage in dialogue on tge issue on
regional and international level. But the AKP has hinted that instead of
staying in the Istanbul Convention, the government will bring about judicial
reforms to address crimes against women and will bring an Ankara Declaration
for the purpose.
In short, behind his withdrawal from Istanbul
Declaration, Erdogan's narrow Islamist ambitions and weakening political base
is responsible. To garner support of the conservative political forces he has
succumbed to their demands. This will only further jeopardize the women and the
minorities in Turkey.
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/turkey-withdrawal-istanbul-convention-violence/d/124617
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