In the heart of Türkiye, a nation steeped in cultural tradition and rapid modern change, a distressing pattern has taken hold—one that deeply affects families, communities, and the fabric of society itself. Official statistics reveal that every year, more than 250 women die by “falling from high places,” a euphemism increasingly associated with femicide and suspicious deaths. Sociologists and social commentators argue that these figures obscure a harsh reality: many of these women did not jump but were pushed, victims of a broader societal failure to address gender-based violence and systemic indifference. Behind the cold numbers lie devastating human stories that unsettle the nation’s conscience, calling for urgent reflection and reform.
The case of Şebnem Köker exemplifies how social issues—ranging from domestic abuse, gender discrimination, to institutional neglect—intertwine to devastate lives. The police initial investigation, which dismissed her death as a suicide, concealed critical evidence: Şebnem was not alone the night she died, yet authorities failed to thoroughly examine her environment or the people present. Her last known interactions—bordering on clandestine—reveal a young woman caught in a web of complex relationships and societal pressures. Despite her family’s protests, police guided the narrative towards suicide, ignoring forensic evidence and eyewitness accounts suggesting foul play. Such systemic oversight highlights how the societal association of women’s independence with vulnerability, amplified by institutional missteps, perpetuates a cycle of injustice that harms families and erodes trust in the justice system.
The persistent undercounting of femicide in Turkey, according to campaigners like Kav of We Will Stop Femicide, results not just from official apathy but from a systematic failure to properly investigate and prosecute these crimes. Forensic experts internationally have developed methods to determine whether a death was a fall or a push, yet in Turkey, such techniques remain underutilized or ignored. Despite landmark cases—like the conviction of Çağatay Aksu for pushing Shiule Çet off a high-rise—many perpetrations remain uninvestigated, and justice remains elusive. Families, often shattered emotionally and financially, grapple with the pain of lost loved ones, uncertain whether societal neglect or deliberate concealment bears greater responsibility for the silence that envelops these tragedies. Their stories underscore that the social fabric is frayed when gendered violence goes unpunished, leaving families and communities to mourn in the shadows of systemic indifference.
Amid this backdrop, social reformers and legal advocates call for a paradigm shift, emphasizing that justice is a societal responsibility, not merely a bureaucratic process. They argue that the state’s failure to investigate thoroughly, combined with cultural stigmas surrounding women’s agency and mental health, fosters an environment where perpetrators are shielded, and victims’ families are left to seek truth alone. Campaigns promoting forensic advancements and judicial transparency have seen limited success, with advocates like Süren fighting lengthy legal battles to have cases reopened or re-examined. Their persistence offers a flicker of hope—an acknowledgment that change begins with societal acknowledgment of these injustices, bridging the gap between systemic failure and compassionate action. Society finds itself at a crossroads: to confront its failures, reckon with cultural shifts that tolerate violence, and foster community resilience rooted in respect and equality. If society aspires to be more than just a mosaic of broken stories and distant statistics, then it must embrace the moral imperative to protect its most vulnerable, ensuring that the lives lost are not but whispers on the wind but catalysts for transformative justice.















