Hundreds on Sunday protested peacefully in Istanbul, calling for justice after the brutal murder of a transgender woman earlier this month in Turkey.
The body of Hande Kader, an activist for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) cause, was found in a forest on Aug. 8 after she was killed.
The 22-year-old’s burnt body was identified in a morgue by a friend, Turkish media reported.
Photo: EPA
More than 200 demonstrators carried banners saying “justice for Hande Kader” and “let’s fight for our survival” under the supervision of anti-riot police close to the famous Istiklal Avenue near Taksim Square.
“We will not stop until we find those responsible for Hande Kader’s murder,” said Ebru Kiranci, spokeswoman for Istanbul’s LGBTI Solidarity Association.
Another transgender activist read a statement saying “transgender murders are political” because those responsible advocate a “hetero-normative” and “conservative educational system that does not take us into consideration.”
Although police had water cannons, they were not used. Previous LGBT demonstrations have seen the use of water cannon and tear gas against protesters.
The murdered sex worker became an iconic figure in the LGBT community after she sat in front of water cannon and anti-riot officers in June last year, as authorities tried to ban a gay pride parade in Istanbul.
In a report published in March this year, the rights group Transgender Europe said Turkey had the highest rate of trans murders in Europe.
Between January 2008 and December last year, 41 trans and gender diverse individuals were killed in Turkey, compared with the second highest in Italy of 33, the group said.
Kader was the second murder to shock the LGBT community in recent weeks after Syrian refugee Muhammed Wisam Sankari was found mutilated and decapitated on July 25, his friends said.
Homosexuality has been legal in Turkey since 1923 and was also legalized in the Ottoman Empire from the mid-19th century.
However, the LGBT community in Turkey says it faces harassment and abuse in a largely conservative Muslim society.
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