Toronto Star

Turkish plan to pardon some rapists fails to pass

- CINAR KIPER

ISTANBUL— A debate flared in Turkey on Friday after a government proposal which would pardon some people imprisoned for statutory rape fell short of passage by legislator­s.

The proposal would defer sentencing or punishment for sexual assault in cases where there was no force and where the victim and perpetrato­r were married. Opposition legislator­s, rights groups and other critics warned that the proposal facilitate­s child marriage.

The proposal was introduced late Thursday by the ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party, rooted in Turkey’s Islamic movement, which says it is meant to protect those who were too young to marry legally. An earlier law said there is no sexual assault if the couple marry. It was replaced by the current law in 2005, which set a minimum prison sentence of eight years, extended to 16 years in 2014.

“Those aren’t rapists, they aren’t people who committed sexual assault by force. Those are acts done with the consent of families and the young ones,” Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said on Friday, adding that the later law had ignored the matter of consent.

The government’s proposal would apply to cases between 2005 and Nov. 16 of this year, which would affect an estimated 3,000 families.

Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency reported several opposition legislator­s slamming the proposal. Republican People’s Party Deputy Chair Tekin Bingol said they “strongly rejected” it, saying it amounted to a pardon for rapists. Mehmet Onur Yilmaz of Gundem Cocuk, a children’s rights organizati­on whose operations were halted by the government last week said the issue stemmed from not taking child marriage seriously.

“If there was an understand­ing that child marriage constitute­d sexual assault such a proposal would not even be brought up,” said Yilmaz.

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