A Transgender Woman Was Raped And Set On Fire And People Are Demanding Justice.
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Hande Kader was an active member of the LGBT community in Turkey.
Hundreds of people have called for justice and an urgent end to hate crimes against LGBT people in Turkey after the murder of Hande Kader, a 22-year-old Turkish trans woman who was raped and set on fire last week.

Twitter
Friends of Kader — who was a sex worker — told local media she was last seen entering the car of a client. Kader’s body was found burned and mutilated in the Istanbul neighborhood of Zekeriyaköy on Aug. 12. She was identified by prosthetics at the city morgue.
Kadın Cinayetleri
@KadinCinayeti
Yakılarak öldürülen #HandeKader kardeşimiz için sessiz kalmıyoruz!
Following Kader’s murder, LGBT rights campaigners and supporters have been paying tribute to her. On Twitter her name was trending after thousands of people tweeted the hashtag #HandeKadereSesVer — meaning “Give voice to Hande Kader” — and on Facebook people set up memorial pages to her.
Umarim gittigin yerde huzura kavusmussundur, sana bunu yapan canilerin bedel
odemesi dilegiyle... #handekaderesesver
Kader was a well-known LGBT activist and had been photographed and filmed participating in a number of protests, including at Gay Pride Istanbul in June 2015, where she was escorted by police after security forces fired water cannons and rubber pellets to disperse the parade.

Kader at Gay Pride Istanbul in 2015 Sener Yilmaz Aslan / MOKI
Though homosexuality is not illegal in Turkey, campaigners say that discrimination against LGBT people is still commonplace. Kander’s murder comes just two weeks after a gay Syrian, Muhammad Wisam Sankari, was reportedly found beheaded in Istanbul, in an area just several miles from where Kader’s body was discovered. Sankari was a refugee who had arrived in the city a year ago.

Muhammad Sankari kaosgl.org
Local LGBT organizations — including Pink Life Association — held a press conference on Thursday, calling for the rights of transgender people in Turkey to be protected. Later that day, the Istanbul LGBTI+ network and Pride Week Committee released a public statement “demanding justice” for Kader and others who have been killed because of their sexual orientation.
Part of the statement
read: “We feel great anger: our beloved friend Hande Kader was burned
to death… Hande was a person who raised her voice against hate crimes
and encouraged everyone to raise their voices too.
“We are constantly shouting at LGBTI+ Prides, Trans Prides and other
protests that homophobic and transphobic statements are leading to hate
crimes, murderers often escape unpunished, and hate crime laws are
urgent. Unfortunately, our Prides have been banned in the last two
years, yet we need to be seen, to be on the streets and to shout our
demands in order to end hate crimes… We demand justice for all that lost
their lives for being a woman, a trans or a gay.”
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