Watch: Outcry as woman in Turkey assaulted for ‘wearing shorts in Ramadan’

A Turkish man assaulted a young woman on an Istanbul bus for wearing shorts during of Ramadan. (Photo courtesy: Hurriyet Daily News)
Updated 22 June 2017
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Watch: Outcry as woman in Turkey assaulted for ‘wearing shorts in Ramadan’

ISTANBUL: A Turkish man assaulted a young woman on an Istanbul bus for wearing shorts during Ramadan, images showed Wednesday, sparking a furor among women’s rights activists.
University student Asena Melisa Saglam was travelling on the bus on June 14 when the man seated behind her struck her in the face, images published by Turkish media showed.
She responded by chasing after him but he grabbed her and slung her to the back of the bus before running out of the vehicle.
Saglam said that throughout the journey the man had been verbally harassing her by saying she should not be wearing shorts during Ramadan.
The man was detained shortly afterwards but following questioning -- in which he reportedly said he had been “provoked” — he was set free, causing a new outcry.

“The release of the attacker is a threat to all women,” the women’s rights organization We Will Stop Femicide Platform wrote on Twitter.
“We will wear whatever we want outside. We will not give up our freedoms.”
Following the outcry, an order was given to re-arrest the man. It later emerged that he had been held in jail since Sunday on separate accusations of committing a tax crime and is also wanted for drugs offences.
Saglam, 21, was quoted by the Hurriyet daily as saying: “From the moment I sat down he was making these remarks ‘you dress like this during Ramadan? You should feel ashamed to be dressed like that’.”
She said she put on her headphones and ignored him but then he got up, hitting her so the side of her jaw hit the bus window.
A man named Abdullah Cakiroglu who kicked a Turkish woman who was wearing shorts last year in a similar case is currently on trial and faces nine years in jail if convicted.
The incident comes amid continued alarm over the levels of violence against women in Turkey, which the authorities admit is unacceptably high.
According to the Platform, 173 women were murdered in the first five months of 2017 and 328 for the whole of 2016.


NASA plans ISS medical evacuation for Jan. 14

The International Space Station is seen from the space shuttle Atlantis on July 19, 2011, after it left the orbiting complex.
Updated 11 sec ago
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NASA plans ISS medical evacuation for Jan. 14

  • Space station set to be decommissioned after 2030
  • NASA and SpaceX target undocking Crew-11 from the International Space Station no earlier than 5 p.m. ET on Jan. 14, with splashdown off California targeted for early Jan. 15 depending on weather and recovery conditions

WASHINGTON: NASA crew members aboard the International Space Station could return to Earth as soon as Thursday, the US space agency said, after a medical emergency prompted the crew to return from their mission early.

“NASA and SpaceX target undocking Crew-11 from the International Space Station no earlier than 5 p.m. ET on Jan. 14, with splashdown off California targeted for early Jan. 15 depending on weather and recovery conditions,” the agency said in a post on X.

Details of the medical evacuation, the first in ISS history, were not provided by officials, though they said it did not result from any kind of injury onboard and that the unidentified crew member is stable and not in need of an emergency evacuation.

The four astronauts on Nasa-SpaceX Crew 11 have been on their mission since Aug. 1. These expeditions generally last around six months, and the crew was already due to return to Earth in the coming weeks.

American astronauts Mike Fincke and Zena Cardman, as well as Japan’s Kimiya Yui and Russia’s Oleg Platonov, would be returning, while American Chris Williams will stay onboard the international body to maintain a US presence.

Officials indicated it was possible the next US mission could depart to the ISS earlier than scheduled, but did not provide specifics.

Continuously inhabited since 2000, the ISS functions as a testbed for research that supports deeper space exploration — including eventual missions to Mars.

The ISS is set to be decommissioned after 2030, with its orbit gradually lowered until it breaks up in the atmosphere over a remote part of the Pacific Ocean called Point Nemo, a spacecraft graveyard.