Miss Turkey stripped of crown over contentious tweet about failed coup |
The winner of Turkey's national
beauty pageant was on Friday forced to hand back her crown hours after winning,
over a tweet relating to the failed coup that was deemed offensive.
Itir Esen, 18, smiles after being
crowned as Miss Turkey 2017 in Istanbul.— AP
Itir Esen, 18, won Miss Turkey 2017
during a ceremony in Istanbul on Thursday night and was going to represent the
country in the Miss World competition in China.
But organisers said that would not
be possible after they discovered an “unacceptable” tweet Esen sent around the
first anniversary of the July 15, 2016 coup attempt aimed at ousting President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
In the tweet, she compared the blood
shed in her menstrual cycle with that of the 249 people who lost their lives
during the failed coup and are now celebrated in Turkey as martyrs.
“I am having my period this morning
to celebrate the July 15 martyrs' day. I am celebrating the day by bleeding on
behalf of our martyrs' blood,” she wrote.
Organisers said they had seen the
tweet after the beauty contest's results were announced and had to hold an
hours-long meeting to verify the post.
Can Sandikcioglu, head of Miss
Turkey, said in a statement that the tweet was posted by Esen.
“The Miss Turkey organisation, whose
objective is to promote Turkey in the world and to contribute to its image,
cannot accept such a post,” he announced.
Esen's title was handed to Asli
Sumen, who came second and who will now represent Turkey in the Miss World
contest in China on November 18.
In a message shared on her Instagram
account, Esen said her post was written “carelessly” but was not politically
motivated, apologising for any misunderstanding.
“I want to say that as a 18-year-old
girl, I had no political aims while sharing this post,” she wrote, saying that
she only shared her “innocent thoughts during a sensitive time”.
“My family raised me by teaching to
respect our homeland and nation. I do not have a character that could show
disrespect to our martyrs,” she said.
Esen is not the first Turkish beauty
queen to fall foul over a social media post.
In 2015, prosecutors launched an
investigation against former Miss Turkey beauty queen Merve Buyuksarac on
charges of insulting Erdogan through social media posts.
Buyuksarac was given a 14-month
sentence by an Istanbul court last year, but the sentence was suspended on
condition that she does not reoffend within the next five years.
Opposition critics of the president
have decried shrinking freedom of expression under Erdogan in Turkey, where
thousands have been prosecuted for social media postings deemed to have
insulted the Turkish leader.
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