Turkey's retreat from the Instanbul Convention has drawn blanket condemnation from around the world and sparked nationwide protests in a country where domestic violence is prevalent, with at least 300 femicides and 189 suspicious female deaths recorded so far in 2021
Turkey formally withdrew Thursday from a landmark international treaty protecting women from violence, and signed in its own city of Istanbul, though President Recep Tayyip Erdogan insisted it won’t be a step backwards for women. AP
Turkey's formal exit from the Istanbul Convention, a landmark international treaty negotiated in 2011 to prevent and prosecute violence against women, has received severe criticism from various quarters, though President Recep Tayyip Erdogan insisted it won't be a "step backward" to end gender-based violence.
This comes after Erdogan ended the country's participation in the convention with a surprise overnight decree in 21 March this year, prompting condemnation from women's rights groups and Western countries.
A court appeal to stop the withdrawal was rejected this week.
"We will not be silenced, we will not fear, we will not bow down," chanted women among a crowd of several hundred who gathered in the capital Ankara. "We are not giving up on the Istanbul Convention," read a banner.
Similar protests were held in other Turkish cities as an appeal against the withdrawal from Opposition parties was rejected by the Council of State on Tuesday. Demonstrators clashed with police who fired tear gas in Istanbul.
Thousands are out in central İstanbul protesting today’s formal withdrawal from the #IstanbulConvention and it’s starting to turn violent as protesters force their way through police barriers pic.twitter.com/ZnOl15ioBY
— Liz Cookman (@liz_cookman) July 1, 2021
What is the Istanbul Convention? The Istanbul Convention, a human rights treaty established by the the Council of Europe, with the aim to prevent and prosecute all forms of violence against women, promote gender equality and ensure protection and rehabilitation of women who are victims of violence.
Why has Turkey withdrawn from treaty protecting women? Erdogan announced his "Action Plan for Combating Violence against Women" on Thursday, which includes goals such as reviewing judicial processes, improving protection services and gathering data on violence.
"Some groups are trying to present our official withdrawal from the Istanbul convention on 1 July as going backwards," he said. "Just like our fight against violence towards women did not start with the Istanbul Convention, it won't end with our withdrawal."
Even though the official gazette did not include the reason for Turkey's withdrawal, some officials of Erdogan's nationalist party claimed that the convention demeans traditional family structure, promotes divorces and encourages acceptance of LGBTQ in the society.
How big of a problem is gender-based violence in Turkey? Turkey's retreat has drawn blanket condemnation from around the world and sparked nationwide protests in a country where domestic violence is prevalent, with at least 300 femicides and 189 suspicious female deaths recorded so far this year by rights group We Will Stop Femicide Platform.
"The withdrawal sends a reckless and dangerous message to perpetrators who abuse, maim and kill: that they can carry on doing so with impunity," said Amnesty International's secretary general, Agnes Callamard.
Before the withdrawal, women's organisations urged Ankara to apply the treaty to protect women.
"We fought for the convention to be implemented. They believe they can exit from the convention with the word from one man. But women won't give up," Ipek Deniz, 35, told AFP in Istanbul.
Critics say the bans on the Pride march and the treaty withdrawal demonstrate a "creeping Islamisation" under Erdogan, who first came to power as prime minister in 2003.
Response of international community, other organisations
Women, LGBT groups and others have been protesting the decision. They say the convention's pillars of prevention, protection, criminal prosecution and policy coordination, as well as its identification of gender-based violence, are crucial to protecting women in Turkey.
With inputs from agencies