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NEWS & LETTERS, AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 2003

Our Life and Times by Kevin A. Barry

Turkish murders

More than 5,000 women worldwide are murdered by their family members in “honor killings” every year. In Turkey, protests by women’s rights organizations as well as the requirements of membership in the European Union, have recently forced the Turkish parliament to approve a human rights law that puts an end to lenient sentences for murders in the name of “family honor.” For years, men and occasionally women who killed a woman family member could invoke Article 462 of the Turkish criminal code that reduced their sentence by 80%.

The recent case of Cemse Allak in the Kurdish city of Diyarbakir attracted much attention because she lay semi-conscious with a crushed skull after her brother stoned her and the man who had raped her. During the seven months she lay in a hospital bed, her family members refused to visit her. Only members of a Diyarbakir women’s organization, Kamer, visited her. Even when her death was announced, her family members refused to claim her body. Kamer members saw to it that she had a coffin. They flouted religious tradition by carrying the coffin into the municipal cemetery themselves.

--Sheila Sahar

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