Turkey’s Erdogan and unending human rights repression


Date posted: October 26, 2016

Usman Dikko

Sometimes one cannot help sitting back considering overwhelming events that continue to reshape various parts of the world. Away from the razzmatazz of the campaign in United States presidential election and the current battle to dislodge Islamic States (ISIS) from their self-proclaimed capital city in Mosul, Iraq, the endless onslaught on human rights in Turkey has not ceased to send cold shivers down my spine.

The judiciary, media organisations, opposition parties, civil servants, charity groups, just to mention a few, are being subjected to a daily dose of massive abuses and suffocation in Turkey under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.  The recent catch to the abuse list is the sacking of medical professionals, scientists, and other academics from universities.

This may not come as a surprise to many as even before the aborted coup that took place in Turkey few months ago, which was allegedly designed to overthrow the President, Erdogan has not always hidden his obsession to crush dissenting views on his iron-hand style of governance amid claim of being a democrat. The coup became a perfect opportunity to squeeze out life from any perceived opposition groups by fingering them as the coup plotters.

But it appears having tagged members of Gulen movement, a group inspired by the US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, as elements behind the coup despite no concrete proofs and in the face of denial by the peace-loving and highly-respected cleric, Erdogan seems to be now afraid of his own shadow, hence the unending quest to hit hard on anything, groups, individual believe to be a possible threat to his ‘rulership.’  Recently some Nigerian students in Turkey were made to also taste the bitter pill of rights violation as they were brazenly detained for their alleged support for some Turkish people who are said to be against the government thereby sparking a diplomatic row between the two countries.

Such rights abuses of both the Turkish people and other nationals are now beginning to unsettle international commentators and other lovers of humanity, with many questioning the seeming conspiracy of silence in the war against human rights being waged in Turkey.

One of such groups that recently add its voice against human rights repression in Turkey is the New York-based Physicians for Human Rights (PHR). The group has already launched a public petition campaign asking people to urge Turkish government against what it calls “the worst repression we have ever seen.”
According to a statement pasted on its website that almost melt away my heart, Physicians for Human Rights said “Medical professionals, scientists, and other academics are being fired from universities in Turkey by the thousands. Their crime? Participating in groups peacefully advocating for human rights and freedoms. It is imperative that these academics be immediately reinstated and that the right to freedom of expression be upheld.”

The statement has already sparked various petitions from the website readers calling on President Erdogan to tread carefully and reinstate the sacked academics. One of the petitioners writing under the title “Uphold Human Rights and Reinstate Persecuted Academics,” didn’t minced words as he pointed out that arrest of academics and purging of the judiciary send a wrong signal on blatant human rights violation.

Parts of the petition read: “I am writing to express my deep concern with the recent purge of thousands of university professors, deans, and other academics including medical professionals and scientists from Turkey’s institutions of higher education based on their alleged membership in groups advocating peacefully for human rights and fundamental freedoms.

“These restrictions on academic freedom further compound the consequences of the dismissal of nearly 60,000 government employees in the immediate aftermath of the failed July coup. Any functioning democracy requires a functioning judiciary. Yet Turkey’s courts have virtually ground to a halt after nearly 3,000 judges were dismissed from their jobs overnight for suspected links to the attempted coup, hampering the judiciary’s ability to independently evaluate the potentially arbitrary arrests of nearly 10,000 people and reports of ill-treatment in detention.”

While I join others to call on President Erdogan to reinstate the sacked academics, it still appears to me as if I’m dreaming to see a highly-respected country like Turkey descending so low to an abyss of human rights violation fiefdom that even a third world country would not dare in a 21st century.


Usman Dikko, a public affairs analyst, writes in from Kaduna

Source: Daily Trust , October 26, 2016


Related News

“Peaceful Coexistence” – Workshop Organized Jointly by KADIP and Korean Religious Leaders

Intercultural Dialogue Platform (KADIP), whose vision is to set up bridges between different cultures and faiths, welcomed religious leaders from Korea in Istanbul. KADIP and Korean Conference on Religion and Peace (KCPR; an institution that brings together representatives of 7 different faiths) jointly organized a workshop entitled “Turkey-Korea: Peaceful Coexistence” which took place at the headquarters […]

Mysteries, and a Crackdown, Persist a Year After a Failed Coup in Turkey

Mr. Erdogan’s own statements have also raised questions about the sequence of events. In an account posted on the president’s website, Mr. Erdogan said he was first warned of unusual military activity at 4:30 p.m. by his brother-in-law. He tried to contact Mr. Fidan and Mr. Akar around 5 p.m., he said but was unable to reach either of them.

Woman detained over links to Gülen movement after giving birth

A woman was detained less than 24 hours after delivering a baby yesterday for alleged affiliation with the Gülen movement, a faith-based group inspired by Turkish cleric Fethullah Gülen. Betül Uluçam, 34, was detained in the hospital where she had given birth less than a day before.

Trustees decide to remove Gülen’s books from NT bookstores

In an explicit example of censorship, a panel of trustees who were appointed to Kaynak Holding last week in a government-backed move has decided to have copies of all books written by Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen removed from the shelves of hundreds of NT Mağazaları bookstores across the country, Today’s Zaman has learned.

Grand stage shows by Turkish Olympiad students enthrall İzmir locals

İPEK ÜZÜM, İSTANBUL Students coming to Turkey from all around the globe for the 11th International Turkish Olympiad — a festival that celebrates the Turkish language and which this year has brought together 2,000 students from 140 countries — fascinated thousands of locals in İzmir with their stage performances on Sunday night. A very large […]

Dialogue and distrust: on the predicament of Gulen-inspired organisations in the UK

FRANCES SLEAP Dialogue can be hard work. It is an indisputably good idea for there to be meaningful contact between people of different religious, ideological and cultural groups, but to make that happen where it hasn’t yet happened is no mean feat. Between 2010 and 2014 I worked at the Dialogue Society, with people putting […]

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

SEO Skill Suite: Tools for Keyword Research, Technical & Backlink Analysis

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

In Case You Missed It

“Time to Help” launched in England

Ramadan Dinner At Kings Bay Y Celebrates Peace And Unity

Main opposition CHP says received no message from Fethullah Gülen

Gülenist refugees from Turkey start over in U.S.

Gülen worries fake news could associate new terror attacks, assassinations in Turkey with him

Turkish PM’s wife praises devotion of Prague school’s teachers

Gülen withdraws libel complaint after housewife apologizes

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News