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Sexual abuse against children in Turkey increased by 700%, How an Extremist Government Treats Girls and Women,

October 8, 2018 By administrator

Sexual abuse against children in Turkey increased by 700% in the 10 years to 2017, according to the Diyarbakir Bar Association. 440,000 children under the age of 18 have given birth since 2002, according to Turkey’s Human Rights Association. (Image source: iStock)

by Uzay Bulut,

  • The scandal of the underage girls who gave birth was covered up by the administration of the hospital. They failed to inform either the police or judicial officials — even though they are obligated to do so by law and regulations when they discover a minor is pregnant or has been subjected to sexual abuse.
  • Instead, the social worker who exposed the scandal, Iclal Nergiz, has been persecuted by the hospital and other authorities. An investigation has been launched against her.
  • Sexual abuse against children in Turkey increased by 700% in the 10 years to 2017, according to the Diyarbakir Bar Association.

Turkey’s Human Rights Association (IHD) has issued a chilling report about children’s rights abuses in Turkey. According to it, “since 2002, under the AKP [Justice and Development Party] rule, 440,000 children under the age of 18 have given birth.”

“One in every four marriage in Turkey is a child marriage,” said Selen Doğan, a member of Ankara-based Flying Broom Women’s Communication and Research Association.

According to the Turkish Civil Code, men and women cannot marry before they turn 18.

“There are only a few exceptions that allow someone to marry before turning 18. A 17-year-old person may be granted permission to be married with the consent of his/her parents or legal guardian; and a 16-year-old person may be granted permission to be married by a court decision and with the consent of his/her parents or legal guardian.”

Nonetheless, Zelal Coşkun, a member of the Children’s Rights Commission of the IHD, said that child marriages have been on the rise in recent years:

“According to the data of TÜİK [Turkish Statistical Institute], in the last 10 years, 482,908 [underage] girls have been married off with the permission of the state. In the last six years, 142,298 have become mothers and most got married in religious [Islamic] ceremonies.”

These abusive acts take place in many parts of the world, but in Muslim societies the practice of underage marriages is warmly tolerated by many; in some instances, the perpetrators are protected by the authorities. That Islamic scriptures encourage early marriages — for girls as young as nine — also seems to be used to normalize abusive acts, including child marriages and underage mothers. Sadly, the practice of child marriages, a long-lasting tradition in Muslim communities, has a theological basis. Muhammad, the founder of Islam, married Aisha when she was six and consummated his marriage with her when she was nine. He was 54 years old. The Koran also advocates the practice.

“A List of Shame That Will Shatter Turkey,” is the title of a report published by the Turkish newspaper Hürriyet, which includes the names of 115 underage girls who gave birth at just one Istanbul hospital, Kanuni Sultan Süleyman Education and Research Hospital, during just five months in 2017.

Worse, the scandal was covered up by the administration of the hospital. They failed to inform either the police or judicial officials — even though they are obligated to do so by law and regulations when they discover a minor is pregnant or has been subjected to sexual abuse.

Instead, the social worker who exposed the scandal, Iclal Nergiz, has been persecuted by the hospital and other authorities. An investigation has been launched against her, her place of work has been changed twice and she has been exposed to heavy pressure and harassment. “Ever since the incident was exposed, nothing has changed except for my punishment [by the hospital],” Nergiz said in one interview.

“The hospital officials think that I have betrayed the country and that I have destroyed the image of the hospital! I am exposed to a policy of oppression and intimidation.” Nergiz said in another interview.

The scandal came to light when Nergiz noticed that the files of a 17-year-old pregnant girl and the notification that had to be submitted to the police were both missing from the hospital records. She then sought help from the hospital administration and prosecutors.

“I noticed that a lot of pregnant adolescents, 15-year-olds, 16-year-olds, 18-year-olds, came to the hospital. Some were pregnant with their second child. Almost all had come to our hospital previously… But they were not reported to anyone for years.

“…These children are said to be married with an imam marriage. I would not call that a marriage. What matters is official marriage. And these kids are not officially married… I saw a 16-year-old Syrian kid who was pregnant with her second child. She gave birth to her first child when she was 12. I cannot forget her.”

Nergiz also says:

“About 250 pregnant girls under age 18 were treated at the hospital over a period of five months and nine days. I realized the cases of 115 of these girls were not reported to police. Nor were they recorded in the protocols of the hospital police.

“…Every year, around 450 to 500 pregnant girls are taken to this hospital… There is not a single door I did not knock on at the hospital concerning these 115 children. But I ended up being marginalized.”

According to Turkish law, people below the age of 18 are regarded as children. However, Nergiz says:

“… according to the hospital administration and the governor, they are not [children]… They do not report pregnant minors to anywhere. Because they do not care. That is why, the situation is so dire. To them, it is just normal. When I talk about 115 pregnant children, it is an optimistic number. There are doctors who do not even report child pregnancies to the social services unit. So, the real number is so much higher.”

The first court hearing that involved those who did not inform the judiciary about the scandal took place on June 25.

Akif Akça, the deputy head physician, and Nazlıcan Dilber, a social services expert, who are on trial for covering up child pregnancies, testified. They both rejected accusations that the presence of pregnant girls in the hospital was not reported to authorities: “Procedures were carried out according to the instructions of the Ministry of Health and there has been no negligence.”

At the conclusion of the first hearing, the court lifted the ban on international travel that had been imposed on Akça and Dilber. They are now free to leave Turkey. The court also informed the two that they are not required to attend future hearings in the case.

A totally different ruling, however, was issued concerning Nergiz, who exposed the scandal. Although she did not appear at the first court hearing, as she is the one who exposed the scandal and lodged a complaint with prosecutors, the judge decided that Nergiz must attend the next hearing.

The reality she helped expose in that hospital is the reality of the entire country, Nergiz said. “The situation is the same all across Turkey. Moreover, what was exposed in that hospital is just the tip of the iceberg.”

How many of these girls were already married when they arrived at the hospital to give birth and at what age did they get married? Or were they sexually abused out of wedlock? How many were later forced to marry their abusers? What happened to their babies? How many other children in Turkey are victims of similar abuses? It seems these questions will remain unanswered.

What is known is that child marriages, child rape, girls who become mothers although they themselves are still children, and other types of child sexual abuse are increasingly commonplace in Turkey.

“Turkey is the country that has the highest number of child marriages in Europe,” stated a 2016 report by the Prevention of Violence and Rehabilitation Organization and the Crime and Violence Practice and Research Center by Istanbul’s Acıbadem University. “But as religious [imam] marriages are widespread, it has not been possible to detect the real number of child marriages in Turkey.” The report also detailed the terrible medical, psychological and social effects of child pregnancies on both underage mothers and their babies.

Sexual abuse against children in Turkey increased by 700% in the 10 years to 2017, according to the Diyarbakir Bar Association.

“According to the 2015 Turkey report by the organization ECPAT (End Child Prostitution and Trafficking), children are the group that is exposed to sexual violence the most in Turkey,” Zelal Coşkun, a member of the Children’s Rights Commission of the IHD, said at a symposium in Istanbul.

Coşkun emphasized that due to early marriages, many girls remain uneducated and unemployed:

“In Turkey, the net schooling rates of women are below those of men at all levels except for distance education. The number of girls who continue middle school after primary school are getting increasingly lower.

“According to the data of the Ministry of National Education, 97.4% of those who cannot continue their education due to child marriages and engagements are girls.”

Although the legal system of Turkey is not yet based on Islamic sharia law, Islamic teachings and traditions still largely shape the thinking and behavior of many people — including their views of child marriage and child abuse. The greatest victims of the Islamization of societies still seem to be girls and women.

Uzay Bulut, a journalist from Turkey,

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: against children, in Turkey increased by 700%, sexual abuse

BREAKING NEWS The Vatican announced a meeting of bishops worldwide to confront sexual abuse as Pope Francis faces accusations of a cover-up.

September 12, 2018 By administrator

By Jason Horowitz

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis has summoned to Rome the presidents of the world’s bishops conferences for a meeting focused on protecting minors, the Vatican announced on Wednesday, as the pontiff wrestles with a global clerical sexual abuse crisis and explosive accusations of a cover-up that have shaken his papacy and the entire Roman Catholic Church.

The meetings will be held from Feb. 21 to 24, according to the Vatican, which added that the pope had “amply reflected” on the issue with his top council of cardinal advisers during three days of meetings that ended on Wednesday.

The announcement came on the eve of a meeting in the Vatican on Thursday between the pope and a group of American bishops, including Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo, the president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, and Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, Francis’ leading adviser on the issue of sexual abuse. The Americans are coming in search of answers from the pope and a full investigation into why one of their most prominent colleagues was allowed to ascend to a top position in the American church, despite allegations that he had sexually abused seminarians.

Reports of abuse by that American prelate, Theodore E. McCarrick of Washington, led to his resignation as cardinal. But subsequent accusations, in a bombshell letter by the formal Vatican ambassador to the United States, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, accused Francis of lifting sanctions against the American that had been put in place by Francis’ predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Pope Francis, sexual abuse

Turkey: Torture, Sexual Abuse Rampant in Prisons

September 10, 2018 By administrator

by Uzay Bulut,

  • Inmates in a jail in Şanlıurfa in southeast Turkey tell of the plight of 27-year-old Uğur Yeloğlu, who they say has been isolated and tortured so badly since his imprisonment seven months ago that his level of functioning is like that of a baby.
  • Yeloğlu was arrested in Istanbul in January for allegedly “aiding a terrorist organization.” His lawyer, Abdülkadir Aslan, said that in spite of the many months his client has been in jail, his indictment has not yet been prepared by prosecutors: “The investigation file is also marked ‘confidential,’ so we do not know what it contains.”
  • “Prisoners are beaten up and sometimes killed, when they refuse to roll-call standing up, give military salute, reject strip searches, or ask to see a doctor.” — Report by the opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP).

In the early 2000s, after the Justice and Development Party (AKP) first came to power in Turkey, its leader, then Prime Minister (now President) Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, proclaimed a policy of “zero tolerance” for torture.

In June of this year, Turkish Justice Minister Abdulhamit Gül repeated the same mantra. “We — as the AKP government — are implementing a policy of zero tolerance for torture,” he said.

Statements by many prisoners, their lawyers and human-rights defenders, however, tell a much different story; victim and witness accounts reveal that torture and other forms of unlawful abuse are increasingly widespread in Turkish jails and prisons. Inmates in a jail in Şanlıurfa in southeast Turkey, for example, tell of the plight of 27-year-old Uğur Yeloğlu, who they say has been isolated and tortured so badly since his imprisonment seven months ago that his level of functioning is like that of a baby. He has apparently lost his memory and is unable to walk, or even eat, on his own. In addition, these inmates said, the prison’s healthcare staff are lax in their treatment of him.

Yeloğlu was arrested in Istanbul in January for allegedly “aiding a terrorist organization.” His lawyer, Abdülkadir Aslan, said that in spite of the many months his client has been in jail, his indictment has not yet been prepared by prosecutors. “We have officially appealed to authorities for my client to be transferred to a full-fledged hospital,” Aslan said. “But we have not received a response yet. The investigation file is also marked ‘confidential,’ so we do not know what it contains.”

Opposition MP Tuma Çelik of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) submitted a motion on behalf of Yeloğlu to Justice Minister Gül, which said, in part:

“Is it true that Yeloğlu is exposed to torture and mistreatment? Has the ministry started an investigation into these allegations? Will authorities provide a response to his lawyer’s request to place him in a hospital due to his deteriorating health? What are the legal grounds for having kept him in solitary confinement?”

Gül has yet to respond.

Yeloğlu is one of many prisoners and other detainees accused of having ties to organizations, such as the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), and what the Turkish government now calls “Fethullahist Terrorist Organization (FETO),” followers of the US-based Muslim cleric, Fethullah Gülen, whom Erdoğan accuses of having orchestrated the failed military coup attempt in July 2016.

According to a 2017 report by Human Rights Watch (HRW):

“People in Turkey accused of links with terrorism or with the 2016 military coup attempt have been tortured in police custody, while others have been abducted, amidst growing evidence of detention abuses.

“Several lawyers told Human Rights Watch that their clients told them of torture or showed them physical evidence. But they said that many victims are afraid to complain, fearing reprisals against their family members. In one case Human Rights Watch documented, the former head of a preschool told a court at length at his trial in February that police had beaten and threatened him with sexual assault and rape to make him ‘confess’ his involvement with ‘FETÖ.’ Six other men on trial with him made similar assertions.”

Although such prisoners or detainees are accused of terrorism-related offenses, the United Nations Human Rights Committee expressed concern as early as 2012 that several provisions of the Turkish Anti-terrorism Law are incompatible with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, citing:

“(a) the vagueness of the definition of a terrorist act; (b) the far-reaching restrictions imposed on the right to due process; (c) the high number of cases in which human rights defenders, lawyers, journalists and even children are charged under the Anti-Terrorism Law for the free expression of their opinions and ideas, in particular in the context of non-violent discussions of the Kurdish issue.”

In November 2017, the Diyarbakır Bar Association released a report on human rights violations at prisons in Elazığ and Şanlıurfa, according to which, among other things, “female prisoners are exposed to violence, including sexual violence, and child prisoners are battered. A transsexual prisoner was sexually assaulted by wardens.”

Attorney Öykü Çakmak, a member of the Prison Watch Commission, said that the most fundamental rights violations at prisons included “physical and psychological pressures, sexual violence, mistreatment and torture.” In addition, she added:

“The prisoners’ right to health is restricted. Cameras are placed in common use areas in rooms. Warm water is not regularly provided. Disciplinary punishments, which are more severe than those specified in the rules and regulations, are arbitrarily imposed on the prisoners. Prisoners are forcibly frisked naked before they are taken to other prisons, hospitals or courts. They are handcuffed during their treatment at hospitals. Bans on their communication with their families and visitors are commonplace, and their access to books, magazines and newspapers is often precluded.”

In the Diyarbakır Bar Association’s February 2018 report on human rights violations at a prison in Elazığ that “a special team of wardens was formed for torturing prisoners.”

Another member of the Prison Watch Commission, Attorney Önder Alçiçek, said:

“The prisoners are battered and tortured when they refuse to stand single file, as if in a military formation. A special team of wardens beats the prisoners, insults and threatens them with death and rips up their possessions. The prisoners said they have no security and are not allowed to go to the prison’s hospital to receive medical attention.”

Alçiçek added that all the prisoners that members of the Commission saw had signs of beatings on their bodies.

Meanwhile, Barış Yarkadaş, an MP from the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), presented a parliamentary motion to Justice Minister Gül, stating:

“On February 26, 2018, at Tekirdağ T-type prison, about 50 wardens laid five prisoners on the floor and tied their hands and feet. One was then taken to a ‘sponge room’ [cells named for the yellow foam that pads their interiors] and was kept waiting there with his hands tied. His hands and feet started getting numb and he felt pain on his head because he was kicked in the head. He was taken out of the room after an hour and a half.”

Yarkadas added that many other prisoners suffered similar fates. “Torture has become systematic,” he said. “It is not isolated.”

The speaker of Turkey’s Grand National Assembly (parliament), İsmail Kahraman, rejected Yarkadaş’s motion, however, claiming that it “contained personal opinions and the questions in it concerned private lives.”

Yarkadas then said:

“This answer means that they [members of the government] are protecting and encouraging torturers instead of confronting them. Kahraman rejects all motions regarding torture and mistreatment. He does not want to document any of the torture experienced under AKP rule. He thinks he can hide facts by covering up torture. But the reality of torture is crystal clear and continues to hurt people.”

According to a report on the news website Haberdar, university and high school students have been similarly treated. There are currently around 70,000 students in Turkish prisons, and many of them do not even know what they are accused of, since their lawyers are not allowed to see their indictments.

The mother of one such youth told the newspaper Evrensel that her 18-year-old son, who has been in jail for eight months, was tortured in rooms where there are no security cameras. She said that in August 2017, a group of 30-40 wardens attacked her son and two other boys at Maltepe prison in Istanbul. “My son passed out due to the beatings,” she said. “When he woke up, he noticed he was handcuffed behind the back. He showed me the bruises all over his body; he had difficulty raising his right arm; he said he was hit hard on his ear; and he had pain in his ribs.”

She also said that she was not allowed to exchange letters with her son and that it is hard to obtain information about his and other prisoners’ health. Meanwhile, she added, although her son has appeared in court three times over the past eight months, nobody has been able to provide a convincing explanation as to why he is in jail.

Another mother, two of whose children are in prison, told Evrensel:

“We cannot see prosecutors. They tell us the case files were classified as confidential. The wardens act as if we are criminals. They say, ‘If your kids are good, why are they here?’ They often impose bans on visiting our children…”

On March 2, the opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) issued an “urgent call” about Turkish prisons, which it claims “have evolved into torture centers,” and reported that charges of “terrorism” by the government are lodged at “almost any dissident voice — politicians, members of parliament, mayors, activists, human rights advocates, trade unionists, journalists, intellectuals, academics and the like.” The HDP report stated, in part:

“In February 2018, alarming news about the torture of prisoners have come from many prisons across the country. In some prisons torture and ill treatment have peaked and become routinized… Prisoners are physically abused on a regular basis. Prisoners are beaten up and sometimes killed, when they refuse to roll-call standing up, give military salute, reject strip searches, or ask to see a doctor.

“The most recent dreadful death was that of Ulaş Yurdakul, a Kurdish man who was sleeping on a mat under the stairs due to lack of space. Prisoners and prison guards beat him up regularly. Eventually, he was beaten to death.”

The report also decried the government’s recent decision to impose uniforms on prisoners charged with terrorism, claiming that if this is implemented, “it is most likely that Turkey’s prisons will become extremely tense spaces of violence, torture and death. Political prisoners have expressed strong commitment to resisting this decision.”

The HDP’s “urgent call” was addressed to “the international institutions, including the United Nations, the European Parliament, the European Commission and their rapporteurs on torture and human rights; the political parties from the world; and embassies to urgently take action against alarming levels of torture and ill treatment in Turkish prisons.”

For the sake of the victims of torture and abuse in Turkish jails and prisons, let us hope that those institutions heed this desperate appeal and hold the Erdoğan government accountable.

Uzay Bulut, a journalist from Turkey, She is currently based in Washington D.C.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: sexual abuse, Turkey: Torture

Australian archbishop sentenced for sex abuse cover-up

July 3, 2018 By administrator

Australian Cardinal George Pell has been charged with multiple counts of sexual abuse

Australian Cardinal George Pell has been charged with multiple counts of sexual abuse

Australia’s most senior Roman Catholic cleric, Philip Wilson, has been sentenced to a year’s detention for covering up child sex abuse by a priest. It is a landmark case and has been hailed by survivors of abuse.

Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson was sentenced to 12 months of detention by an Australian court on Tuesday for covering up child sex abuse. He will serve at least six months before he is eligible for parole.

Wilson is the most senior Roman Catholic cleric to be sentenced in connection with child abuse. It is a landmark case which has been welcomed by some abuse survivors as a strong warning to institutions that fail to protect children.

Newcastle Magistrate Robert Stone will consider on August 14 whether Wilson is suitable for home detention.

Stone found the 67-year-old cleric guilty in May in the Newcastle Local Court of failing to report to police the repeated abuse of two altar boys by a pedophile priest named James Fletcher in the Hunter Valley region north of Sydney during the 1970s.

Wilson could have been sentenced to a maximum of two years in prison. Stone said Wilson failed to act against Fletcher because he “wanted to protect the church and its image.”

“The whole of the community is devastated in so many ways by the decades of abuse and its concealment,” the magistrate said. “We are all the poorer for what has occurred.”

Outside the court on Tuesday survivors of abuse protested against the Church and called on Wilson to resign as archbishop. They carried signs accusing the Church of hypocrisy and describing it as a “fraudulent cult.”

Peter Gogarty, a child abuse victim and advocate for fellow survivors, said he was disappointed that Wilson had walked free from court, but said “there is no doubt the archbishop has received a significant sentence.” Survivors remained pleased by the landmark conviction, he said.

Holding the church accountable

Wilson’s sentencing was another step toward holding the church to account for a global abuse crisis that has also engulfed Pope Francis’ financial minister, Australian Cardinal George Pell. A few lawyers said that they expect many more clerics to be charged in Australia as a result of Wilson’s test case.

Last month, prosecutor Gareth Harrison told the magistrate that Wilson must be jailed to send a message that such institutional cover-ups will no longer be tolerated.

But defense lawyer Ian Temby told the court that Wilson had several chronic illnesses and might not survive a prison sentence.

State governments in Australia are ramping up pressure on the Church to report child abuse, and are legislating to prosecute priests who maintain that revelations of pedophilia made in the confessional cannot be disclosed.

Wilson testified that he did not recall ever hearing allegations against his fellow priest.

Fletcher was arrested on unrelated child abuse charges in 2004 and died in prison of a stroke in 2006 while serving an almost eight-year sentence.

av/msh (AFP, AP, dpa)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Australian Cardinal George Pell, sexual abuse

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