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Iraq sentences 15 Turkish women to death over “Daesh” Islamic State membership

February 25, 2018 By administrator

This file picture shows a view of the Central Criminal Court of Iraq in the capital Baghdad.

A court in Iraq has sentenced more than a dozen Turkish women to death over membership in the Daesh Takfiri terrorist group and involvement in acts of terror across the conflict-ridden Arab country.

A judicial official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Central Criminal Court sentenced 15 female Turkish citizens to death, while another Turkish woman was condemned to life imprisonment.

On February 22, Arabic-language al-Sumaria television network quoted Iraq’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed Mahjoub as saying that Iraqi authorities had extradited four women and 27 children from the families of Daesh Takfiri terrorists to Russian officials.

“There was no proof that those extradited had been involved in terrorist operations against Iraqi civilians or security forces,” Mahjoub said, adding, “They will be prosecuted in Russia for illegally entering Iraq.”

Iraq’s Arabic-language al-Mashriq newspaper has reported that more than 1,500 women and children from the families of Daesh militants are currently being held in the country, and that the Baghdad government is coordinating with their respective countries to decide their fate.

Iraqi government spokesman Saad al-Hadithi has stated, “All foreign nationals who have committed crimes and acts of terror against Iraqi people, either directly or through support for Daesh terrorists, will be subject to the Iraqi law.”

He added, “This also applies to foreign women of Daesh militants. The government is coordinating with the countries to which the detainees belong. They will be handed over to their respective countries once they are found not to have committed criminal acts or engaged in killings and bombings in Iraq.”

Last month, Iraq’s Central Criminal Court issued a death penalty by hanging for a German citizen of Moroccan origin in accordance with Anti-Terrorism Law.

Abdul Sattar al-Biraqdar, spokesman for the Supreme Judicial Council, said the woman, whose identity was not disclosed, had confessed during investigations that she traveled from Germany to Syria and then to Iraq, because she had a strong belief in Daesh.

The German citizen was accompanied with her two daughters, who later married members of Daesh terrorist group.

“The woman is accused of providing logistical support to the terrorist organization, and helped them commit their criminal acts. She is also convicted of complicity in attacking Iraqi security forces,” Biraqdar said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraq, Turkish-women

Turkish women relate sexual harassment stories via social media

February 16, 2015 By administrator

Beren Saat, celebrity,

Beren Saat, celebrity,

In Turkey women, Journalist, writers, intellectuals, speaking to foreign media as ’traitors’

Turkish women started a social media campaign on Feb. 15 to help end violence against women by sharing their own sexual harassment stories under the hashtag #sendeanlat (you tell your story too), after a 20-year-old woman was brutally killed in southern Turkey, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

The burned body of 20-year-old Özgecan Aslan, a psychology student who had been missing for two days, was discovered Feb. 13 in a riverbed in the Tarsus district of the southern province of Mersin.

The brutal slaying of Aslan created outcry around Turkey, where women, together with many men, took to the streets to protest Aslan’s murder and violence against women in general.

A social media campaign with the hashtag #sendeanlat was initiated to draw attention to violence against women, providing a space for women to share their own stories of how they were sexually abused or raped.

Beren Saat, a Turkish actress and celebrity, wrote via Twitter about her own experiences and how hard it was to be a woman in Turkey.

Saat wrote about the sexual abuses she has faced, starting from her school years up until very recently, even as a well-known actress.

“All the cat-calls at me while I was returning home from school with a school uniform skirt … my accelerated steps in the dark while returning home from preparatory school … the face of the child who showed me his erect penis to me inside our apartment building and me running home with trembling hands and not telling this story to anyone … my fight with a drunk broadcasting manager who grabbed my butt during the TV channel’s celebration night…” were examples of some of the abuse Saat related.

Didem Soydan, a well-known Turkish model, tweeted that she had received abusive text messages, which started with “so you’re a model,” after testifying and giving her cell phone number to police in the case of a woman who was forced into a car after being beaten.

Among the stories shared under the #sendeanlat, many women related either their own harassment stories or shared measures that women had to take in order to avoid sexual abuse.

“Not being able to turn the light on immediately when you enter your house to avoid being spotted at which flat you live,” or “Is there any man [in Turkey] who tells his mother to keep talking on the phone because a group of women are standing in his way?” and “We cannot wear lipstick, miniskirts, grow our hair long, go out at night, laugh because we are women, right?” were a few examples of the many shared stories which women in Turkey face.

Meanwhile, during a rally condemning Aslan’s murder in the Central Anatolian province of Kayseri, a woman cried for justice as she related by megaphone the story of her rape.

“Enough already! What is the end to the murders, rapes and all these things? The judge said there is ‘consent’ because [the rape victim] has passed 16 years,” said M.N., the rape victim, referring to her own rape case, during which the suspect for rape walked free from court because the judge ruled she had given her consent to the sexual act as she was over 16 years old.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: harassment, sexual, Turkish-women

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