Thursday, September 6, 2012
Turkish woman awaits trial after beheading her alleged rapist
(CNN) -- A woman in Turkey is awaiting trial after
beheading a man who she says raped her repeatedly for months and is the
father of her unborn child. Her lawyer says the woman killed the man to
protect her honor.
Nevin Yildirim, a
26-year-old mother of two, lives in a small village in southwestern
Turkey. She said the man, Nurettin Gider, began the attacks a few days
after her husband left in January for a seasonal job in another town,
according to a source close to the case.
Yildirim said Gider
threatened her with a gun and said he would kill her children, ages 2
and 6, if she made any noise, according to the source. That was the
first of repeated rapes over the next eight months, the source said.
At one point, Yildirim
said, Gider sneaked into her house while she was asleep and took
pictures of her, the source said. One of the pictures shows her pregnant
body. Gider threatened to publish the pictures if she didn't obey him,
the source said.
In small villages like
hers, honor is held above all else, and women carry the burden of honor
for their families. Pictures like those would have been devastating for
Yildirim and her family and could have posed a danger.
On August 28, at least
five months pregnant by a man who she said continued to rape her,
Yildirim said she decided she had had enough. Gider was climbing up the
back wall of her house. "I knew he was going to rape me again," she said
at her preliminary hearing August 30.
She said she grabbed her
father-in-law's rifle that was hanging on the wall and she shot him. He
tried to draw his gun and she fired again.
"I chased him," she said.
"He fell on the ground. He started cussing. I shot his sexual organ
this time. He became quiet. I knew he was dead. I then cut his head
off."
Witnesses described Yildirim walking into the village square, carrying the man's head by his hair, blood dripping on the ground.
"Don't talk behind my
back, don't play with my honor," Yildirim said to the men sitting in the
coffee house on the square. "Here is the head of the man who played
with my honor."
She threw Gider's head
to the ground, the witnesses said. Video from Turkish broadcaster DHA,
which arrived on the scene before the authorities, showed Gider's head
on the ground.
Witnesses called authorities and Yildirim was arrested.
Gider was 35 and the father of two children, 15 and 9. He was married to an aunt of Yildirim's husband.
Yildirim told her legal representative she regrets what happened, the source said.
"I thought of reporting
him to military police and to the district attorney, but this was going
to mark me as a scorned woman," Yildirim said, according to the source.
"Since I was going to get a bad reputation I decided to clean my honor
and acted on killing him. I thought of suicide a lot but couldn't do
it."
Yildirim said she was worried people would judge her children because of what happened, the source said.
"Now no one can call my
children bastards," she said, according to the source. "I cleaned my
honor. Everyone will call them the children of the woman who cleaned her
honor."
The source said Yildirim
went to a health clinic a while ago seeking an abortion, but health
workers told her she was 14 weeks pregnant and abortion was not an
option.
In Turkey, abortion is
allowed during the first 10 weeks of pregnancy, after which it is
permitted only to save the life or health of the mother or in cases of
fetal impairment, Human Rights Watch said.
At her hearing, Yildirim
said she doesn't want to keep the baby and that she is ready to die,
the source said. The public prosecutor's office has ordered a medical
examination to decide whether Yildirim may have an abortion and to
assess her mental stability, the source said.
Yildirim's father, Zekeriya Yildiz, told DHA his daughter did not report the alleged abuse to anyone in the family.
"If she would have told us, we would have taken other precautions," he said.
Yildirim is in the local jail while she awaits trial.
In a report last year,
Human Rights Watch decried gaps in Turkish law that it said leave women
and girls unprotected from domestic abuse. Some 42% of women older than
15 in Turkey and 47% of rural women have experienced physical or sexual
violence at the hands of a husband or partner at some point in their
lives, the group said.
"She has lived through a
terrible trauma. She must be charged with self-defense," said Gursel
Oztunali Kayir, a sociologist at Akdeniz University and a member of
Antalya Women Support Organization.
Related Posts:
world news
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)













0 comments: