Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Tells Women Not To Laugh In Public

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BY SHANNON GREENWOOD POSTED ON JULY 29, 2014 AT 3:04 PM

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Pictured here: terrible people, according to Turkey’s deputy prime minister

CREDIT: SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Take note, women: if you chuckled in public at this headline, you are apparently bringing about the collapse of civilization. This according to Bülent Arınç, the deputy prime minister of Turkey, who indicated as much in a speech on Monday that has been widely criticized as both sexist and ridiculous.

During a speech on Monday, Arınç said that, among other activities, women should not laugh in public if they are to adhere to proper social mores. The speech was given on Eid al-Fitr, the official end to the month-long Islamic celebration of Ramadan. In his speech, Arınç outlined his ideas of morality saying:

Chastity is so important. It is not only a name. It is an ornament for both women and men. [She] will have chasteness. Man will have it, too. He will not be a womanizer. He will be bound to his wife. He will love his children. [The woman] will know what is haram and not haram. She will not laugh in public.She will not be inviting in her attitudes and will protect her chasteness.

Arınç also scrutinized youth-centered TV shows, which he says encourage teens to become “sex addicts,” and cell phones, which women use to talk “unnecessarily” to each other. “Women give each other meal recipes while speaking on the mobile phone. ‘What else is going on?’ ‘What happened to Ayşe’s daughter?’ ‘When is the wedding?’ Talk about this face to face,” he said.

This patriarchal perspective transcends Arınç’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) which has governed Turkey for the past 12 years. In 2013, another party member went on a sexist tirade against a group of female reporters after a picture of him sleeping in the Parliament’s garden was published in a local newspaper. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who isvying for the presidency, once told a room full of women’s right organizations: “I don’t believe in equality between men and women.”

As the Huffington Post notes, Turkey had a thriving women’s rights movement in the 1980s and 90s, but has recently experienced a backslide in progress. Violence against women has doubled over the past few years, only one third of women are employed, and the country rates almost dead last in gender equality in education, health, politics, and the economy.

In 2011, Erdoğan replaced the one Turkish ministry specifically focused on women’s rights with the “Ministry of Family and Social Policies” which places women’s issues as merely a subcategory within the new division. This department also handles issues related to the country’s children, elderly, disabled, and families of soldiers who have died in action. Human Rights Watch at the time called the move a backward step for women’s rights in Turkey.

Erdoğan’s political opponents quickly seized on Arınç’s comments to lambaste the ruling party. “If a man can think only this way in a bayram day, then this mentality has a problem,” said Burhan Şenatalar, deputy chair of the Republican People’s Party, AKP’s political rival, in response to Arınç’s comments. “Tayyip Erdoğan has the same mentality problem.”

On Twitter, Pervin Buldan of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, tweeted: “From now on, we will respond to all statements by Arınç by laughing.”

http://thinkprogress.org/world/2014...-minister-tells-women-not-to-laugh-in-public/
 

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#BBCtrending: The women having a laugh in Turkey
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By BBC TrendingWhat's popular and why
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Hazal Naz Besleyici doesn't want the government telling her whether she can laugh or not
Continue reading the main story
Best of BBC Trending
Women across Turkey are posting photos of themselves laughing and smiling on social media. Why?

Women should not laugh in public. So said Turkey's Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc in a speech on Monday about "moral corruption" in Turkey. "Chastity is so important," he said. "She will not laugh in public."

His comments have prompted a big backlash from women on social media in Turkey, with thousands posting photos of themselves laughing and smiling on Twitter and Instagram. There have been more than 300,000 tweets using the term "kahkaha" - the Turkish word for "laughter" - and on the hashtags "Resist Laughing" (#direnkahkaha) and "Resist Woman" (#direnkadin).

Many suggested the government should focus on issues like rape, domestic violence and the marriage of girls at a young age - rather than women laughing in public.

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Ece Temelkuran posted this photo to her Twitter page
"It was an extremely outrageous and conservative statement," says writer and political commentator Ece Temelkuran, who has almost one million followers on Twitter. She was among the first to tweet an image of herself smiling - and encouraged other women to do the same. "My whole timeline was full of women laughing - which was extraordinary, and kind of beautiful," she told BBC Trending.

On Instagram it was a similar story. "I'm free and whether I laugh or not is my decision," says 23-year-old Hazal Naz Besleyici who posted a photo of herself with a broad grin in response to the comments. "They should not interfere in our life," she told BBC Trending.

Many men in Turkey have joined in the criticism of the deputy prime minister. "Oh God, let this be just a joke," tweeted Fatih Portakal, a famous Turkish TV presenter. "If women can't laugh in public, then men should not cry in public," he added - a reference to the deputy prime minister's reputed propensity to shed a tear when listening to speeches by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

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Tens of thousands of images have been shared on Instagram
Erdogan himself prompted a similar reaction in Turkey two years ago when he referred to abortion as "murder". Many women posted photos of their stomachs to social media, with the words, "My body, my decision."

The first round of the presidential election is due on 10 August, and among the hundreds of thousands of comments and images about women laughing, was a tweet from one of the contenders challenging Erdogan for the job, Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu. Clearly seeing an opportunity to seize the mood, he wrote: "More than anything else, our country needs women to smile and to hear everybody's laughter."

In his speech, the deputy prime minister also called on men not to be "womanizers" and blamed TV shows for encouraging teenagers to become "sex addicts". While the general tide of opinion on social media was damning in response, he did get some support. One man tweetedto say Arinc was simply trying to uphold "moral values" that form "part of Turkish culture".


http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-28548179
 

joeychizzle

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Stupid Muslim mothafukkas.. white arabs:beli:
hold fast to centuries-old doctrines dictating male dominance brehs.
yall make good kebabs though
 
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I wish there was a way these people could get blown up without my tax $ helping to fund it.
 

joeychizzle

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Turks aren't Arabs and they hate Arabs...
Given the ridiculousness of the deputy prime minister's statement, I'm not exactly trying to be 100% correct here.
Fact is, every country has retards, some are just more outspoken than others. It's amazing how retards get voted into office to be honest.
 

humble forever

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he's been good for their economy but

:ufdup:that man is a douchebag with a bunch of islamists as his followers. i'll never support that
 
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