everywhere, except in one field, where there are very few women, especially as you go up the echelons of decision-making, and that is politics, and that makes a huge difference. so the ones who are making the decisions are usually very patriarchal, conservative men. emma: you use the word "femicide." and actually, not everybody uses it. but nearly every day of the year, a woman is killed, and that is only the women who are recorded in turkey. do you think it is important, as someone who thinks all the time about what words to use, that that word is used and that it passes into common parlance? elif: yes, i think it is so important. we need to use the word "femicide." we need to use the word "misogyny." but we also need to understand that hate speech directed against women is a crime, and it leads to other crimes. so every case shows this. and i don't think i have to mention social media, alongside the role of media, in which, unfortunately, it is always women who are put under the magnifying glass. "what was she wearing? what was she doing at that hour of the night? why was she out?" immediately -- or,