Türkiye: International Women’s Day march must go ahead “without bans, beatings and other police violence”

Ahead of tonight’s 21st International Women’s Day night march in Istanbul, Amnesty International is calling on the Turkish authorities not to ban the event and to ensure participants are protected when marching, instead of being harassed and attacked by the police.

“For the last seven years, Istanbul’s International Women’s Day march has been banned and peaceful demonstrators attempting to gather to mark the day have been met with plastic bullets, tear gas and police batons, as well as unlawful detention and prosecution,” said Esther Major, Amnesty International’s Senior Research Advisor in Europe.

“Tonight’s march must be able to go ahead without the bans, beatings and other police violence that have marred previous years. Rather than restricting the march, Turkish authorities must instead enable and protect the marchers as well as take action to put an end to the multiple forms of discrimination and gender-based violence in Türkiye.

“Peaceful protestors’ calls for action to protect human rights are particularly relevant and pressing given the context of the current humanitarian crisis that has resulted from the catastrophic earthquakes.

“Amnesty International will be joining the International Women’s Day marches in Istanbul and Ankara. We call on the authorities to ensure that the thousands who gather tonight are protected when they march and their legitimate demands for much needed action on women’s rights implemented.”

Background

In previous years, the Istanbul Governor’s Office has banned the International Women’s Day march at the last minute. Marchers who defied the ban faced violence, intimidation and police detention as well as baseless prosecutions simply for exercising their right to freedom of peaceful assembly, guaranteed under binding human rights conventions Türkiye is a party to.