Fethullah Gulen ‘very confident’ Turkey extradition from US will fail


Date posted: August 30, 2016

Jillian D’Amours

Fethullah Gulen is “very confident” that Turkey’s efforts to have him extradited from the United States will be unsuccessful, according to an aide close to the Muslim cleric.

Alp Aslandogan, president of the New York-based Alliance for Shared Values (AFSV), said Gulen believes the Turkish authorities will not be able to produce concrete evidence to link him to the attempted coup in Turkey last month.

“He is very confident that the Turkish side won’t be able to produce the evidence because that link [to the coup] is false… So if something is not true, how can they prove it?” Aslandogan told Middle East Eye in a telephone interview.

The AFSV is an umbrella group that represents organisations in the US affiliated with Gulen. It also coordinates media requests about the Gulenist movement, also known as Hizmet, and Gulen himself.

“The Turkish government’s attempt to link [Gulen] with specific acts … are bound to fail because they don’t exist,” Aslandogan said.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused Gulen, a Muslim cleric who has lived in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania since 1999, of being behind the attempted 15 July coup.

At least 265 people were killed and more than 1,400 others were injured in the violent putsch, according to Turkey’s foreign ministry, and the Turkish parliament building was bombed.

Robert Amsterdam, a lawyer for the Turkish government, told The Associated Press last month that “there are indications of [Gulen’s] direct involvement” in the coup attempt.

But Gulen wholly denies the government’s accusations, Aslandogan said.

“[Gulen] categorically denies any involvement and he condemned the coup and he said that if anybody who appears to be a [Gulenist] sympathiser was involved, that is a betrayal of his values,” he said.

Political observers and academics that have studied the Hizmet movement say the 77-year-old cleric operates an extensive network that includes a covert side seeking to assert control of Turkish state institutions.

Some have said that Gulenist involvement in the coup is a reasonable assumption because it came just as Erdogan planned to remove Gulen sympathisers from the military — and the army represented “the last remaining Gulenist stronghold in Turkey”.

“The human brain has a tendency to accept a coherent story, but not every coherent story is actually true,” Aslandogan said when asked to comment on this theory about the timing of the coup and Gulenist involvement.

“It is impossible to know for sure who those [military] officers were, whether they were indeed Gulen sympathisers,” he said.

US confirms extradition request

After weeks of speculation and reports that Turkey had sent a trove of extradition documents to the US, the US State Department confirmed on 23 August that Turkey has formally requested Gulen’s extradition.

“We can confirm now that Turkey has requested the extradition of Gulen,” department spokesperson Mark Toner told reporters.

But the request is not related to the attempted coup on 15 July, Toner said. He did not specify what charge the extradition is related to specifically.

A delegation from the US State and Justice departments was in Ankara last week to meet with Turkish officials to discuss the extradition request for Gulen. A source in Turkey’s Justice Ministry told government news agency Anadolu that those talks were “positive”.

Under the US-Turkey extradition treaty, an individual sought for extradition may only be tried for the charge upon which the extradition request was granted.

The treaty also stipulates that the extradition offence must be considered a crime in both Turkey and the US and be punishable by at least one year in prison.

Experts have said Turkey faces a difficult legal battle to have Gulen extradited, thanks in part to a clause in the 1979 treaty that prohibits extradition on the grounds that the offence is of “a political character” or “on account of his political opinions”.

Asked whether individuals suspected of being involved in the attempted coup must face trial and be punished if found guilty by a court of law, Aslandogan replied, “absolutely”.

But he said he does not believe Gulen would get a fair trial in Turkey.

“Erdogan’s enmity is very clear… So we are talking about a very authoritarian leader who has made his top priority to go after this man,” Aslandogan said.

“It’s very clear now, if Mr. Gulen were to be returned [to Turkey], there is no chance that he will get a fair trial.”

The United Nations has urged Turkey to uphold international human rights standards amidst a widespread wave of arrests and dismissals across the country, including in the judiciary, media, police, military and education fields.

Meanwhile, Turkey has criticised its US ally for not immediately extraditing Gulen, whom the government in Ankara accuses of leading a terrorist group.

Source: Middle East Eye , August 30, 2016


Related News

New Book – The House of Service: The Gülen Movement and Islam’s Third Way (New York: Oxford University Press)

Named after its leader Fethullah Gülen, the movement has established more than 1,000 secular educational institutions in over 140 countries, aiming to provide holistic education that incorporates both spirituality and the secular sciences.

OSCE: Excessive penalties threaten journalism in Turkey

Dunja Mijatovic, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) representative on freedom of the media, has said excessive penalties against journalists may threaten investigative journalism and freedom of speech in Turkey. Mijatovic spoke against an investigation targeting Taraf journalist Mehmet Baransu for reporting on a confidential National Security Council (MGK) document that mentioned a planned crackdown on faith-based groups in Turkey.

AKP turns medical university into its headquarters

Şifa University, which was seized by the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government due to links to the Gülen movement, has been transformed into the AKP’s İzmir provincial headquarters.

Hizmet Movement: Partners We Want

A Turkish political, non-governmental, civil society organisation, Hizmet Movement, has made commendable contributions in Nigeria’s socio-economic life. The movement, which began in the late 1960s, particularly focuses on education, charity and dialogue, which it believes are the remedies to ignorance, poverty and disunity.

AfSV Statement on the Turkish government’s detainment of Kutbettin Gülen

News of the detention of Kutbettin Gülen, the brother of Fethullah Gülen, is as unsurprising as it is troubling, and it is yet the latest example of the Turkish government’s persecution of innocent citizens in the wake of the July 15 coup attempt. Kutbettin Gülen has been detained on trumped-up charges used by President Tayyip Erdoğan’s administration to silence dissent and cement his autocratic hold on power.

Government drags military into politics

There are now serious question marks over whether the government orchestrated the operations at TİB to libel Hizmet for wiretapping with the aim of diverting attention from the separate spying case under way in Ankara and saving those uniformed men from facing judicial scrutiny over charges of spying.

Latest News

Fethullah Gulen – man of education, peace and dialogue – passes away

Fethullah Gülen’s Condolence Message for South African Human Rights Defender Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Hizmet Movement Declares Core Values with Unified Voice

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

Defying Odds, Afghan Girl Gets Top Grades for University Entrance Exams

How to Play Nice With an Angry Erdogan

Gülen movement-backed Abant Platform to discuss Alevi-Sunni ties

Peshawar High Court Restrains Federal Government From Deporting Turkish Teachers Of Pak-Turk School Till Dec 1

Erdogan Uses Coup Like Hitler Used Reichstag Fire, Austrian Far-right Leader Says

Conference on Hizmet movement to take place in Senegal

Izzettin Dogan: ‘Turkish Olympiads achieved what UN couldn’t

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News