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Turkish honour killings: A dishonourable practice

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  • Turkish honour killings: A dishonourable practice

    Turkish honour killings

    A dishonourable practice

    Apr 12th 2007 | DIYARBAKIR AND VAN
    The Economist print edition



    Despite a government crackdown, honour killings persist in Turkey

    WITH his soulful eyes and timid smile, Murat Kara, a 40-year-old
    stocking seller in the mainly Kurdish city of Diyarbakir, is an
    unlikely murderer. Yet 13 years ago he pumped seven bullets into his
    younger sister. His widowed mother and uncles told him to kill the
    17-year-old after she eloped with her boyfriend, staining the family's
    honour. Mr Kara resisted for three months because "I loved my sister
    and didn't believe she deserved to die." But then the neighbours
    stopped talking to him, the grocer refused to sell him bread, the
    local imam said he was disobeying Allah, and his mother threatened to
    curse the milk she had breast-fed him. So he gave in.

    The killing of women by male relatives who believe they have
    dishonoured the family-eg, by getting pregnant outside wedlock or
    wearing revealing clothes-has haunted Turkey for centuries. Bowing to
    pressure from the media, feminist groups and the European Union,
    Turkey's mildly Islamist government has launched an unprecedented
    campaign against honour killings, disarming even its fiercest critics.

    State-employed imams now declare honour killings "sinful" in the
    Friday sermons they deliver across the country. Tens of thousands of
    army conscripts and police recruits are taught that violence against
    women is bad. Brooking the ire of his conservative constituents, Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, told a gathering of foreign
    Muslims that "discrimination against women is worse than racism." Nor
    is this mere talk. Turkey's penal code has been tweaked to stiffen
    penalties not only for those who commit honour killings but also for
    those who plan them. Had Mr Kara, who got seven years thanks to a
    judge who deemed he had been unduly provoked, killed his sister today,
    he would in all probability be serving a life sentence.

    The trouble is that, despite the government's efforts, honour-related
    crimes show little sign of abating. A parliamentary report last August
    found that 1,091 such crimes had been committed in the past five
    years-over four a week. Only three of 51 honour killers interviewed
    for another study said they had any regrets.

    In a society where female chastity is venerated and the motto "my
    horse, my gun and my woman are sacred" is common among men, "this
    should not come as a surprise," notes Zozan Ozgokce, a female activist
    who runs an EU-funded project in Van to counsel abused women. Fatma
    Sahin, a deputy from Mr Erdogan's AK Party who drafted the
    parliamentary report, blames the deeply entrenched patriarchal and
    feudal system in the Kurdish provinces, where many of the murders
    occur. Rampant poverty and illiteracy have been exacerbated by the
    forced eviction of millions of Kurdish villagers by the army in its
    war against PKK rebels in the 1990s.

    With refugee families of up to 20 or more crammed into tiny slums,
    incest and rape have shot up, says Handan Coskun, a social worker in
    Diyarbakir who is investigating links between female suicides and
    honour crimes. One survivor said she was ordered to take her own life
    (and locked in a room with a bottle of bleach) by her father, who
    sought to disguise his daughter's failed murder as suicide. She
    managed to escape; less fortunate souls have been found dead with
    their wrists slit or hanging from a rope.

    In Diyarbakir and elsewhere in the south-east, new efforts are being
    made to protect vulnerable women through emergency hotlines and
    shelters for abused women. The first government-run refuge opened its
    doors outside Diyarbakir two years ago. Many of the residents are
    pregnant teenage rape victims, who risk being killed by relatives who
    blame them (and not their rapists) for their plight.

    Still, male accomplices or perpetrators are often targeted, too. And
    honour crimes are not a uniquely Kurdish phenomenon, says Leyla
    Pervizat, an Istanbul-based expert. This is especially true of the
    fiercely conservative Black Sea region where "after the men are
    killed, their penises are cut off and stuffed in their mouths," she
    adds laconically. What gives her hope is that the number of those
    willing to tip off the authorities about a planned murder is
    growing-so more lives are being saved. And many of the whistleblowers
    are male

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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