Political Rights
Child
Polygamy
Child marriage
114.(b) Consent to marriage
Turkish women who have been raped are seen in some areas
as having brought shame on their families.
Picture: Mustafa Ozer/ AFP/ Getty
Images
Key points
• UN report says Turkish
women forced by families to wed rapists
• Hundreds of
Turkish women killed in ‘honour killings’ each year, says
report
• Report comes as Turkish government pressed to
reform to join EU
Key quote
“When a girl is raped by a man, since she is no
longer a virgin, it is usually believed that the best way to solve the problem
is to get them married, especially if the man is not already married” – UN
report
Story in full RAPE victims in Turkey can be forced by their
own families to marry their rapists – or risk being killed in the name of family
honour, according to a United Nations report released today.
The report, by the United Nations Population Fund, is the first in-depth
study in Turkey of the different motivations behind “honour-killings”, where
women and young girls are murdered by their relatives for allegedly bringing
shame on the family.
Human rights activists estimate that hundreds of Turkish women are murdered
in such killings each year.
The issue is a major concern for the European Union, which is monitoring
human rights improvements made by Turkey in its attempt to join the EU by 2015.
Many such killings take place in poorer communities where family life is
dominated by patriarchal and tribal traditions.
The UN report reveals that in such communities, women who have been raped are
often seen as having dishonoured their families.
“When a girl is raped by a man, since she is no longer a virgin, it is
usually believed that the best way to solve the problem is to get them married,
especially if the man is not already married,” the report says.
It goes on: “If the man is already married and the raped girl is pregnant,
this creates a more complicated situation and usually ends in the girl’s
murder.”
The report suggests that the practice of forcing rape victims to marry their
attackers had been partly reinforced by an earlier, but now obsolete, Turkish
penal code.
This stipulated that if a rapist married his victim, his penalty would be
suspended and if he stayed married to her for five years, it would be cancelled
completely.
The UN report, which is based on interviews with more than 250 people in
Istanbul and other cities with large Kurdish populations, details several such
cases.
One involved the rape of a mentally challenged girl. “The brothers of the
girl offered her in marriage to the man and said that they would pay all wedding
costs, all in an effort to avoid gossip,” the report says.
“In the end, they shot the man dead. Later, they threw the girl into a water
channel.
“Somehow the girl was not hurt; she was saved and then she was sent to
another place through [social] organisations. However, the family is still after
her.”
The UN report will make depressing reading for the government of Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, the prime minister, which was told last month by the European
Commission that it needs to accelerate reforms.
Women’s rights was one of the areas singled out by Brussels as needing
particular attention.
A report by the European Commission said earlier this month that there had
been “little progress regarding women’s rights … the main areas of concern for
women in Turkey continue to be domestic violence, ‘honour killings’, a high
illiteracy rate, and low participation in parliament, local representative
bodies and the labour market”.
The government has recently taken a tougher stand: a new penal code makes
honour killings punishable with life sentences. But prosecution is difficult, as
honour killings are often passed off as suicides and some are never discovered.
Apart from rape, the report defines other situations where a woman from such
a community might be murdered.
A married women who has an affair, runs away with another man, or who leaves
or divorces her husband might be at risk of being hunted down and killed.
Similarly, a divorced woman, who is often still regarded as the property of
her former husband, might be murdered if she starts seeing another man.
Unmarried girls who have a boyfriend are also at risk.
In some “honour” crimes, the families involved may come to another
settlement.
The report gives details of the practice of “Berdel”, where a young girl from
one family is given to another to compensate for a grievance. Sometimes the gift
is a car or gun instead of a girl.
What emerges from the report is a picture of a segment of Turkish society in
which notions of “honour” are deeply ingrained, even among comparatively
educated people.
“I’m definitely against divorce,” the report quotes one 34-year-old,
secondary school educated man from the south-eastern city of Batman as saying.
“If my wife is unfaithful to me, I will either kill her, or if she has a
brother, an older brother, I will tell him: ‘You kill her.'”
Although the Turkish parliament now has a special committee on “honour
killings”, so far there have been few concerted state efforts to address the
issue.
Much of the interest and funding for existing research has come from abroad.
State intervention is not always easy. The UN report points out that many of
the communities where such killings take place are in areas which have a large
Kurdish population.
“After long years of fighting between Turkish security forces and Kurdish
separatist groups in which as many as 30,000 people are thought to have died,
the south-east of Turkey remains tense,” it observes.
One major concern highlighted by the report was the lack of shelters for
women on the run from their families.
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