Annexe 3 :
Turkey: Women Left Unprotected From Violence
Gaps in Law, Police Response, Put Urgently Needed Help Out of
Reach May 4, 2011
A Turkish woman shouts slogans on March 8, 2009 in Istanbul where
more than 5,000 women gathered to mark International Women's Day. Purple
symbolizes feminism in Turkey.
(c) 2009 Getty Images
Gauri van Gulik, women's rights advocate and researcher at Human
Rights Watch
(Istanbul) - Turkey's flawed family violence protection system
leaves women and girls across the country unprotected against domestic abuse,
Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. Life-saving protections,
including court-issued protection orders and emergency shelters, are not
available for many abuse victims because of gaps in the law and enforcement
failures.
The 58-page report, ~`He Loves You, He Beats You': Family
Violence in Turkey and Access to Protection," documents brutal and
long-lasting violence against women and girls by husbands, partners, and family
members and the survivors' struggle to seek protection. Turkey has strong
protection laws, setting out requirements for shelters for abused women and
protection orders. However, gaps in the law and implementation failures by
police, prosecutors, judges, and other officials make the protection system
unpredictable at best, and at times downright dangerous.
"With strong laws in place, it is inexcusable that Turkish
authorities are depriving family violence victims of basic protections," said
Gauri van Gulik, women's rights advocate and researcher at Human Rights Watch
and author of the report. "Turkey has gone through exemplary reform on women's
human rights, but police, prosecutors, judges, and social workers need to make
the system exemplary in practice, not just on paper."
Human Rights Watch interviewed women and girls as young as 14 and
as old as 65 who described being raped; stabbed; kicked in the abdomen when
pregnant; beaten with hammers, sticks, branches, and hoses to the point of
broken bones and fractured skulls; locked up with dogs or other animals;
starved; shot with a stun gun; injected with poison; pushed off a roof; and
subjected to severe psychological violence. The violence occurred in all areas
where researchers conducted interviews, and across income and education
levels.
This report comes as the Council of Europe is about to adopt a
regional convention on violence against women and domestic violence. Turkey
played an important role in drafting the convention as the current Chair of the
Committee of Ministers, and the convention is scheduled to be signed at a
summit in Istanbul on May 11, 2011.
Some 42 percent of women over age 15 in Turkey and 47 percent of
rural women have experienced physical or sexual violence at the hands of a
husband or partner at some point in their lives, according to a 2009 survey
conducted by a leading Turkish university.
The report is based on interviews with, and the case files of,
40 women in Van, Istanbul, Trabzon, Ankara, Izmir, and Diyarbakýr, and
dozens of interviews with lawyers, women's organizations, social workers,
government officials, and other experts.
"That first time, he hit me, he kicked the baby in my belly, and
he threw me off the roof «said Selvi T., not her real name, forced to
marry at age 12, whose husband has abused her for years.
Turkey entered the vanguard of countries offering civil
mechanisms to protect against domestic violence with its 1998 adoption of Law
4320 on the Protection of the Family. This law, as amended in 2007, established
a protection order system under which a person abused by a family member under
the same roof, male or female, can apply directly or through a prosecutor for
an order from a family court.
The orders can, among other things, require the offender to
vacate the home, stay away from the victim and their children, surrender
weapons, and refrain from violence, threats, damaging property, or contacting
the victim. The system is designed to bring about quick action, within days at
most, since people who apply for them are often in extremely dangerous
situations.
The report documents serious shortcomings with Law 4320, though.
The law excludes certain groups of women altogether, such as divorced and
unmarried women. Police, prosecutors, and judges in many cases neglect their
duties. Many women said that police officers mocked them and sent them home to
their abusers, rather than helping them get protection orders, and that
prosecutors and judges were slow to act on protection order requests or
improperly demanded evidence not required by the law.
"The extreme brutality that family members inflict on women and
girls is bad enough, but it is even worse to know that a woman who finds the
courage to escape and ask for protection might be insulted and sent right back
to her abuser," van Gulik said.
Shelters for women and children are another important element of
Turkey's response to domestic abuse. The Law on Municipalities requires every
municipality with 50,000 or more residents to provide a shelter, but the
government has fallen far short of meeting this requirement. Moreover, women
reported to Human Rights Watch that some existing shelters
have dismal conditions and inadequate security procedures. In
fact, staff in some shelters has allowed abusers to enter and have urged women
to reconcile with their batterers.
Selvi T.'s experience reflects many of these problems. Her
husband has beaten and raped her repeatedly for years, inflicting grave
injuries, yet police sent her home multiple times when she sought protection.
When she finally fled to a shelter, police told her husband the location, and
shelter staff let him in and encouraged her to reconcile with him.
On March 7, Fatma ahin, a Justice and Development Party Member of
Parliament for Gaziantep, in southeastern Turkey, announced a proposal to
revise the Law on the Protection of the Family, following consultations with
women's groups. The proposed amendements are before parliament.
The amendments would widen the scope of protection to include
women who are in a relationship but not married. They would direct the Interior
Ministry to provide financial support to protection order recipients. The draft
law would require improved measures to protect information about victims,
including their addresses if they have moved. It provides for dedicated police
and prosecutor units staffed by officers with training and expertise in family
violence. It also would allow prosecutors to grant protection orders outside
court hours, to be presented later for a judge's approval.
Turkey should close the gaps in its family protection law by
explicitly providing that protection orders may be issued to unmarried and
divorced women, including women in unregistered religious marriages, Human
Rights Watch said.
The Justice and Interior Ministries should create dedicated units
at police stations and family courts with specialized staff who can refer women
to social services and deal with their protection claims, Human Rights Watch
said. The Interior Ministry should also develop a complaint mechanism to
identify police officers, prosecutors, and judges who do not uphold the law or
who mistreat domestic violence survivors.
Overall monitoring of the protection order system is also needed,
with more specific, publicly available data on the use of the system. More
shelters are needed, and both the Interior and Justice Ministries should
continue and improve training for police officers, and to train prosecutors and
judge's about the practical requirements of Law 4320, and each official's role
in the process.
"At a time when Turkey is about to host governments from all over
Europe to make a binding commitment to end violence against women, Turkey's
government should take an honest look at its own shortcomings," van Gulik said.
"Turkey needs to make changes so that its family violence protection system
will live up to the new treaty both in design and implementation."
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