US and EU slam Turkey for withdrawing from international treaty preventing violence against women

US and European leaders have criticised Turkey's decision to pull out of an international accord designed to protect women from violence.

Turkish police block women during a protest against Turkey's withdraw decision from Istanbul Convention in Istanbul, Turkey on 20 March 2021.

Turkish police block women during a protest against Turkey's withdraw decision from Istanbul Convention in Istanbul, Turkey on 20 March 2021. Source: AAP/EPA/ERDEM SAHIN

US and European leaders have denounced what they called Turkey's baffling and concerning decision to pull out of an international accord designed to protect women from violence, and urged President Tayyip Erdogan to reconsider.

M Erdogan's government on Saturday withdrew from the Istanbul Convention, which it signed onto in 2011 after it was forged in Turkey's biggest city. Turkey said domestic laws, not outside fixes, would protect women's rights.

The Council of Europe accord pledged to prevent, prosecute and eliminate domestic violence and promote equality.

Killings of women have surged in Turkey in recent years and thousands of women protested on Saturday against the government's move in Istanbul and other cities.
A demonstration in Istanbul against Turkey's withdrawal from Istanbul Convention. The convention requires the prevention of all kinds of violence against women, protection of victims of violence and punishment of criminals.
A demonstration in Istanbul against Turkey's withdrawal from Istanbul Convention. The convention requires the prevention of all kinds of violence against women, Source: Hakan Akgun/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
The United States, Germany, France and the European Union responded with dismay.

It marks the second time in four days that Europe's leaders have criticised Ankara over rights issues after a Turkish prosecutor moved to close down a pro-Kurdish political party.

US President Joe Biden said Turkey's withdrawal from the accord was "deeply disappointing" and a step backward in efforts to end violence against women globally.

"Around the world, we are seeing increases in the number of domestic violence incidents, including reports of rising femicide in Turkey," Mr Biden said in a statement on Sunday.
"Countries should be working to strengthen and renew their commitments to ending violence against women, not rejecting international treaties designed to protect women and hold abusers accountable."

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said the decision was incomprehensible and "risks compromising the protection and fundamental rights of women and girls in Turkey (and) sends a dangerous message across the world".

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who spoke with Mr Erdogan a day before Turkey ditched the pact, wrote on Twitter: "Women deserve a strong legal framework to protect them".

The Council of Europe, which gathers 47 members states, also regretted the decision.
The convention had split Mr Erdogan's ruling AK Party and even his family. Officials floated pulling out last year amid a dispute over how to curb domestic violence in Turkey, where femicide has tripled in 10 years, one monitoring group has said.

But many conservatives in Turkey and in Mr Erdogan's Islamist-rooted AKP say the pact undermines family structures, encouraging violence. Some are also hostile to its stance against discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation.

"The Istanbul Convention, originally intended to promote women's rights, was hijacked by a group of people attempting to normalise homosexuality, which is incompatible Turkey's social and family values. Hence the decision to withdraw," Turkey's presidential communications director, Fahrettin Altun, said in a statement.


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3 min read
Published 22 March 2021 6:30am
Updated 22 March 2021 7:49am
Source: AAP, SBS


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