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This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:Turkish journalists. It includes journalists that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Subcategories
The killing of Emine Bulut was the murder in 2019 of a Turkish woman by her ex-husband. The crime stirred public outrage in Turkey with condemnations of violence against women. On 18 August 2019, Fedai Baran followed Bulut and their daughter into a café in Kırıkkale. Baran stabbed Bulut in the neck and then fled the scene in a taxi.
It includes Turkish journalists that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Pages in category "21st-century Turkish women journalists" The following 22 pages are in this category, out of 22 total.
Several thousand women took to the streets in Istanbul on Saturday to demand Turkey reverses its decision to withdraw from an international treaty against domestic abuse which it once championed.
Most of the women killed in Turkey in November were aged between 25 and 35, with 75 percent of the women in this age range becoming victims after wanting to get divorce. [76] In 2017, a total of 409 women were killed and 387 children sexually abused in Turkey, according to data compiled by the group "We Will Stop Femicide". [77]
Şenay Özdemir was born in Safranbolu, in northwestern Anatolia, Turkey as the daughter of Turkish parents on 18 May 1969. In 1976, her father who was a teacher in Turkey, emigrated to the Netherlands. She studied French and English language and literature, graduaring in 1989.
Nilüfer Demir (born 1986) is a Turkish photojournalist based in Bodrum, Turkey.She has worked with the Doğan News Agency [1] since she was a teenager. [2] She covered the European migrant crisis during the summer of 2015, and her photographs of Alan Kurdi became world news on 2 September 2015.
Tansu Çiller, a Turkish career professor of economics since 1983, entered politics in November 1990, joining the conservative True Path Party (DYP). On June 13, 1993, she was elected the party's leader, and on 25 June the same year, Çiller was appointed the Prime Minister of a coalition government, becoming Turkey's first and only female prime minister to date.