The World

Turkish activists oppose amnesties for child rapists

Last updated on September 11th, 2021 at 03:06 pm

Turkey’s ruling party has begun a second attempt at introducing a law to grant rapists amnesty as long as they marry their victim, four years after a similar bill sparked outrage at home and internationally.
The legislation, which was first debated by parliament on 16 January, would give men suspended sentences for child sex offences if the two parties get married and the age difference between them is less than 10 years.
Opposition parties and women’s rights groups have been quick to point out that the bill in effect legitimises child marriage and statutory rape in a country where the legal age of consent is 18.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan ’s conservative Justice and Development party (AKP) has said the proposal is designed to deal with Turkey’s widespread child marriage problem.
However, Fidan Ataselim, the general secretary of the activist group We Will Stop Femicide, said the new bill was an attempt by the government to erase evidence of Turkey’s growing epidemic of violence against girls and women.
The group, which has tracked gender-related violence and deaths since Turkish authorities stopped doing so in 2009, estimates that more than 2,600 women have been murdered in the last decade, and the number of killings has increased steadily each year.
According to the UN, 38% of Turkish women have suffered physical or sexual violence from a partner.
“In 2016 the government introduced a [similar] draft law on amnesty for child abuse perpetrators. All women stood against it and the bill was withdrawn after our protests,” she said. “If they dare to try again, we will fight against it again.”
Writing in the Cumhuriyet newspaper, Dr Adem Sözüer, the head of Istanbul University’s criminal and criminal procedure law department, said the new bill was likely to increase rates of violence against women and children because it “legitimises the mentality that women are objects to possess or exist for sexual satisfaction”.
Protests against the proposed legislation were held around the country this month. A date for a second reading in parliament has not yet been set.
“Marry your rapist” clauses are present in legislation relating to sexual consent in many countries in the Middle East and Latin America. In recent years such loopholes have been closed after protests against them in Lebanon , Jordan and Tunisia.
Turkey appears to have travelled in the opposite direction. After abolishing such laws in 2005, a 2016 bill that would have allowed the release from prison of men guilty of assaulting a minor if the aggressor married the victim and the act was committed without “force or threat” provoked widespread fury and was eventually defeated.
Ankara insisted that the bill’s intention was distorted by critics. “There are people who get married before reaching the legal age. They just don’t know the law,” the then prime minister Binali Yıldırım said at the time, adding that the measure aimed to “get rid of this injustice”.
His comments were echoed by the justice minister Bekir Bozdağ, who said marriages involving minors were “unfortunately a reality” in Turkey but the men involved “were not rapists or sexual aggressors”.

Albert Echetah

Recent Posts

Simba SC Coach Promises All-Out Attack in CAFCC Quarter-Final Second Leg

Fadlu Davids plans to use an offensive style with Simba SC during their match against Al-Masry of Egypt for the…

April 9, 2025

Warriors vs Suns Preview: Curry Set to Play Despite Injury

Tonight, the Golden State Warriors will play the Phoenix Suns at PHX Arena with Stephen Curry receiving official approval to…

April 9, 2025

South Africa’s Coalition Government Faces Crisis Over Budget Dispute

South Africa's very first multiple-party government from the post-apartheid period deals with critical threats as ANC and DA leaders fight…

April 8, 2025

State Witness Assassinated at Wynberg Magistrate’s Court in Cape Town

Police shot and killed a protected witness in South Africa's Wynberg Magistrate's Court in Cape Town on the morning of…

April 8, 2025

CSA Announces Proteas Men’s Contracted Squad for 2025/26 Season

The 2025/26 season marks the start of the new Proteas Men's contracted squad as CSA has given 18 national contracts…

April 7, 2025

Airlines Face Turbulence Over Controversial Western Sahara Routes

Low-cost European airline companies started flying directly to Western Sahara even though Morocco and Polisario Front keep fighting for its…

April 7, 2025

This website uses cookies.