Cyprus Today

Ankara formally quits treaty to prevent violence against women

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TURKEY officially withdrew on Thursday from an internatio­nal treaty to prevent violence against women, enacting a decision that drew condemnati­on from many Turks and Western allies when President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan announced it in March.

Thousands protested across Turkey this week, after a court appeal to halt the withdrawal was rejected.

“We will continue our struggle,” Canan Güllü, president of the Federation of Turkish Women’s Associatio­ns, said on Wednesday.

“Turkey is shooting itself in the foot with this decision.”

She said that since March, women and other vulnerable groups had been more reluctant to ask for help and less likely to receive it, with Covid-19 fuelled economic difficulti­es causing a dramatic increase in violence against them.

The İstanbul Convention, negotiated in Turkey’s biggest city and signed in 2011, committed its signatorie­s to prevent and prosecute domestic violence and promote equality.

Ankara’s withdrawal triggered condemnati­on from both the United States and the European Union, and critics say it puts Turkey even further out of step with the bloc that it applied to join in 1987.

Femicide has surged in Turkey, with one monitoring group logging roughly one per day in the last five years. Proponents of the convention and related legislatio­n say more stringent implementa­tion is needed.

But many conservati­ves in Turkey and in Mr Erdoğan’s Islamist-rooted AK Party say the pact undermines the family structures that protect society.

Some also see the Convention as promoting homosexual­ity through its principle of non-discrimina­tion on grounds of sexual orientatio­n.

“Our country’s withdrawal from the convention will not lead to any legal or practical shortcomin­g in the prevention of violence against women,” Mr Erdoğan’s office said in a statement to the administra­tive court on Tuesday.

This month, Council of Europe Commission­er for Human Rights Dunja Mijatovic sent a letter to Turkey’s interior and justice ministers expressing concern about a rise in homophobic narratives by some officials, some of which targeted the convention.

“All the measures provided for by the İstanbul Convention reinforce family foundation­s and links by preventing and combating the main cause of destructio­n of families, that is, violence,” she said.

 ??  ?? Activists shout slogans, hold banners and wave flags during a protest against Turkey’s withdrawal from the İstanbul Convention, an internatio­nal accord designed to protect women, in İstanbul on June 19
Activists shout slogans, hold banners and wave flags during a protest against Turkey’s withdrawal from the İstanbul Convention, an internatio­nal accord designed to protect women, in İstanbul on June 19

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