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Turkey vows action after outcry over female student’s murder

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Turkey's leaders on Monday vowed to take action over the "open wound" of violence against women, after the murder and attempted rape of a 20-year-old female student by a bus driver unleashed a wave of public anger.

The killing of Ozgecan Aslan, 20, has become a rallying cause for activists campaigning to end the country's endemic levels of violence against women in Turkey, with thousands taking to the streets to protest over the weekend.

Several top officials even suggested discussions on restoring the death penalty for the suspected perpetrator and his two accomplices, who have all been arrested.

Turkish women meanwhile shared stories of harassment and violence under the viral Twitter hashtag #sendeanlat (you tell your story).

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who enraged many Turkish women in November by declaring they were not equal to men, said the guilty deserved "the most severe punishment".

Posters depicting Ozgecan Aslan and asking for justice for the young woman are seen in Ankara  on Fe...
Posters depicting Ozgecan Aslan and asking for justice for the young woman are seen in Ankara, on February 15, 2015
Adem Altan, AFP

"Violence against women is an open wound on our society," he said in a televised speech in Ankara.

"I hope the awareness that has been raised with the death of Ozgecan will be the beginning of a new era," he added.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters in Ankara that "the trauma we've experienced is so massive that no penalty is severe enough to match such a crime" but expressed hope the crime would mark a turning point for Turkey.

Erdogan's two daughters, Sumeyye Erdogan and Esra Albayrak, earlier paid a joint visit to the grieving family of the victim at her home in southern Turkey.

- 'Only passenger on bus' -

A court in the city of Tarsus, in the southern Mersin region, remanded in custody pending trial suspected murderer Ahmet Suphi Altindoken and suspected accomplices, his father Necmettin Altindoken and Fatih Gokce, the official Anatolia news agency reported.

Women hold placards reading
Women hold placards reading "Ozgecan Aslan is our rebellion" during a demostration in Istanbul on February 14, 2015 against the murder of a young woman named Ozgecan Aslan
Ozan Kose, AFP

Reports said Aslan on Wednesday evening was the only passenger left in a minibus driven by Ahmet Suphi Altindoken, 26, who changed the route of the bus when the other passengers got off, and attempted to rape her.

She tried to resist by using pepper spray but he then stabbed and clubbed her to death.

The driver then returned to Tarsus to find his father, 50, and a friend to help him dispose of the body.

They burned the body in a wooded area in a bid to hide the evidence but the corpse was found by police on Friday.

She was then laid to rest, the coffin borne only by women, on Saturday, February 14, Valentine's Day.

According to the Hurriyet daily, Altindoken confessed to the murder, saying he had stabbed Aslan and then struck the fatal blows with a crowbar after seeing she was not yet dead.

Turkey's Family and Social Minister Aysenur Islam, the only woman in the cabinet, said after visiting the victim's family that capital punishment should be considered for the perpetrators.

Protesters shout slogans during a demostration in Istanbul  on February 14  2015  against the murder...
Protesters shout slogans during a demostration in Istanbul, on February 14, 2015, against the murder of a young woman, named Ozgecan Aslan
Ozan Kose, AFP/File

Turkey in 2004 abolished the death penalty, a key requisite for its membership of the European Union.

Turkey's parliament speaker Cemil Cicek said the issue of capital punishment could be discussed "in line with our international obligations".

Davutoglu however indicated that the perpetrators would be judged in line with Turkey's existing laws.

"We believe that the attackers deserve the most severe punishment that can be handed down in line with our current judicial system," including life sentences and solitary confinement, he said.

- 'Wear black for Ozgecan' -

Turkey is already battling shocking levels of violence against women. According to the Platform to Stop Violence Against Women activist group, 294 women were killed by men in 2014.

Critics claim that the situation is not helped by the ruling Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) and Erdogan's November statement that women were not equal to men.

Protesters hold a banner reading
Protesters hold a banner reading "Ozge, we have suffered with you" during a demonstration in Ankara on February 15, 2015 against the murder of a young woman named Ozgecan Aslan
Adem Altan, AFP

Many prominent Turkish women took part in the #sendeanlat, with superstar actress Beren Saat detailing the abuse she had received from her youth up to her acting career.

Women were also posting pictures of themselves wearing black under the hashtag #Ozgecanicinsiyahgiy (wear black for Ozgecan).

Meanwhile, there was outrage on social media against singer Nihat Dogan for a comment on Twitter about "girls wearing miniskirts and getting naked". Amid an outcry, he was thrown out of the Turkish edition of the game show "Survivor".

Turkey’s leaders on Monday vowed to take action over the “open wound” of violence against women, after the murder and attempted rape of a 20-year-old female student by a bus driver unleashed a wave of public anger.

The killing of Ozgecan Aslan, 20, has become a rallying cause for activists campaigning to end the country’s endemic levels of violence against women in Turkey, with thousands taking to the streets to protest over the weekend.

Several top officials even suggested discussions on restoring the death penalty for the suspected perpetrator and his two accomplices, who have all been arrested.

Turkish women meanwhile shared stories of harassment and violence under the viral Twitter hashtag #sendeanlat (you tell your story).

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who enraged many Turkish women in November by declaring they were not equal to men, said the guilty deserved “the most severe punishment”.

Posters depicting Ozgecan Aslan and asking for justice for the young woman are seen in Ankara  on Fe...

Posters depicting Ozgecan Aslan and asking for justice for the young woman are seen in Ankara, on February 15, 2015
Adem Altan, AFP

“Violence against women is an open wound on our society,” he said in a televised speech in Ankara.

“I hope the awareness that has been raised with the death of Ozgecan will be the beginning of a new era,” he added.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters in Ankara that “the trauma we’ve experienced is so massive that no penalty is severe enough to match such a crime” but expressed hope the crime would mark a turning point for Turkey.

Erdogan’s two daughters, Sumeyye Erdogan and Esra Albayrak, earlier paid a joint visit to the grieving family of the victim at her home in southern Turkey.

– ‘Only passenger on bus’ –

A court in the city of Tarsus, in the southern Mersin region, remanded in custody pending trial suspected murderer Ahmet Suphi Altindoken and suspected accomplices, his father Necmettin Altindoken and Fatih Gokce, the official Anatolia news agency reported.

Women hold placards reading

Women hold placards reading “Ozgecan Aslan is our rebellion” during a demostration in Istanbul on February 14, 2015 against the murder of a young woman named Ozgecan Aslan
Ozan Kose, AFP

Reports said Aslan on Wednesday evening was the only passenger left in a minibus driven by Ahmet Suphi Altindoken, 26, who changed the route of the bus when the other passengers got off, and attempted to rape her.

She tried to resist by using pepper spray but he then stabbed and clubbed her to death.

The driver then returned to Tarsus to find his father, 50, and a friend to help him dispose of the body.

They burned the body in a wooded area in a bid to hide the evidence but the corpse was found by police on Friday.

She was then laid to rest, the coffin borne only by women, on Saturday, February 14, Valentine’s Day.

According to the Hurriyet daily, Altindoken confessed to the murder, saying he had stabbed Aslan and then struck the fatal blows with a crowbar after seeing she was not yet dead.

Turkey’s Family and Social Minister Aysenur Islam, the only woman in the cabinet, said after visiting the victim’s family that capital punishment should be considered for the perpetrators.

Protesters shout slogans during a demostration in Istanbul  on February 14  2015  against the murder...

Protesters shout slogans during a demostration in Istanbul, on February 14, 2015, against the murder of a young woman, named Ozgecan Aslan
Ozan Kose, AFP/File

Turkey in 2004 abolished the death penalty, a key requisite for its membership of the European Union.

Turkey’s parliament speaker Cemil Cicek said the issue of capital punishment could be discussed “in line with our international obligations”.

Davutoglu however indicated that the perpetrators would be judged in line with Turkey’s existing laws.

“We believe that the attackers deserve the most severe punishment that can be handed down in line with our current judicial system,” including life sentences and solitary confinement, he said.

– ‘Wear black for Ozgecan’ –

Turkey is already battling shocking levels of violence against women. According to the Platform to Stop Violence Against Women activist group, 294 women were killed by men in 2014.

Critics claim that the situation is not helped by the ruling Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) and Erdogan’s November statement that women were not equal to men.

Protesters hold a banner reading

Protesters hold a banner reading “Ozge, we have suffered with you” during a demonstration in Ankara on February 15, 2015 against the murder of a young woman named Ozgecan Aslan
Adem Altan, AFP

Many prominent Turkish women took part in the #sendeanlat, with superstar actress Beren Saat detailing the abuse she had received from her youth up to her acting career.

Women were also posting pictures of themselves wearing black under the hashtag #Ozgecanicinsiyahgiy (wear black for Ozgecan).

Meanwhile, there was outrage on social media against singer Nihat Dogan for a comment on Twitter about “girls wearing miniskirts and getting naked”. Amid an outcry, he was thrown out of the Turkish edition of the game show “Survivor”.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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