Paranoia: Turkish ‘hero’ T-shirts land dozens in jail


Date posted: July 25, 2017

Suraj Sharma

Dozens of people are being rounded up all over Turkey for wearing white T-shirts with the word “hero” printed in English across the front.

No official data on the number of those detained or arrested has been released but at least 25 cases have been reported by local media.

One of those arrested included a 13-year-old boy sitting in a cafe with his father in the Anatolian city of Nevsehir. He was released after making a statement to the prosecutor’s office.

The arrests are being carried out based on the suspicion that the wearers are sympathisers and supporters of Fethullah Gulen.

Authorities hold Gulen, a US-based Turkish preacher, and his followers responsible for a failed coup attempt last July.

The clothing crackdown began after a suspect accused of attempting to kill the president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, wore a “hero” shirt during a court appearance on 13 July.

Gokhan Guclu’s clothing led to chaotic scenes in the court in the Aegean region of Mugla. He was sent back to prison after refusing to change his T-shirt.

The incident led to an investigation being launched into the management team at the prison where he is held.

In a speech on 15 July, Erdogan called for Guantanamo Bay-style prison uniforms for all inmates held on suspicion of being Gulenists.

Following that incident, security forces across the country were also instructed to arrest anyone wearing such T-shirts, local media reported.

The majority of those held have said they had no idea that the T-shirt was being associated with Gulenists.

Local media have tried to find links between the word Hero and Gulen’s movement. Some reports cite an article written by Gulen in August 2016 in one of his English-language publications, printed in the US, the Fountain Magazine. The title of the article was “Despair and Heroes”.

The T-shirts produced by local textile firm Defacto have proved a summer hit given their low retail price of 15 Turkish Lira ($4.50).

Defacto has since stopped production of the hero t-shirts and removed them from its store shelves.

Although taught in schools, English is not widely spoken or understood in Turkey.

Emporio Armani, Armenian Empire… same thing

This is not the first time in Turkey that writing on clothing has landed people in trouble.

In 1988, three people were detained and questioned by the gendarmerie security forces for wearing items of clothing that had “Emporio Armani” printed on them.

They were accused of engaging in Armenian propaganda. The Italian fashion house Armani was misconstrued as referring to the Armenian Empire.

All three were later released after giving their statements to the prosecutor’s office.

The current wave of detentions and arrests for wearing hero T-shirts even has some figures close to the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) warning of plots meant to undermine the legitimacy of the government’s hunt against Gulenists embedded in the state system.

The Turkish government’s crackdown over the last year has resulted in more than 169,000 people being judicially processed and more than 50,000 arrests.

The crackdown has expanded to include not just suspected Gulenists but all political opponents of the AKP.

The primary evidence being used to identify Gulenists is their use of obscure encrypted messaging systems called ByLock and Eagle.

However, other more tenuous evidence has also been reportedly used over the past year to identify Gulenists such as arresting people in possession of $1 bills.

It is a common tradition in Turkey for guests to shower the bride and groom with $1 bills because the lowest denominated Turkish paper is higher in value than $1.

Those notes with serial numbers containing F or G were thought to be being used as a form of secret identification by Gulenists.


Emporio Armani issue is summarized in below tweet (added by HizmetNews.Com)

Source: Middle East Eye , July 24, 2017


Related News

Turkish PM Erdoğan lashes out at Gülen as the head of ‘neo-Ergenekon’

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has stepped up his fiery rhetoric against his ally-turned-nemesis, the Gülen movement, criticizing U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen as the leader of “neo-Ergenekon.”

Who stalls the reforms [in Turkey]?

ABDÜLHAMİT BİLİCİ “A group of people, including businessmen, students and teachers who came all the way from Thailand, traveling 9,000 kilometers to cast their votes in the referendum (on September 12, 2010), are now back to Thailand. Neşet Kahraman, who spent $2,000 on travel in order to cast his vote, said: ‘The referendum was pretty […]

Police raid successful Gülen-inspired schools, kindergarten in eastern Turkey

As one of the numerous raids against the schools affiliated with Gülen movement, popularly known as Hizmet Movement, two schools and a kindergarten were raided by police along with inspectors on Friday morning.

Auditors raid Gülen-inspired private school in Adana with police

In yet another government-backed operation targeting the Gülen movement, tax inspectors from the Finance Ministry on Saturday carried out a raid with police at a private school opened by volunteers of the movement in southern province of Adana.

9 Months imprisonment for hate crimes against Gülen Movement in Germany

Hakan Koçak was sentenced to 9 months’ imprisonment due to insulting and threatening the volunteers of the Hizmet Movement in Nürnberg, Germany. The judge also told Kocak long-term advice and explained that Germany is a constitutional state.

Tariq Ramadan says Erdoğan should practice what he preached to Mubarak

Prominent scholar Tariq Ramadan, grandson of the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, has criticized the Turkish prime minister for seeking more power and urged him to rethink staying in power for a longer time. Ramadan said, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan once told former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak — that one day he will have to know how to leave — is true for him as well. “[Erdoğan] also needs to get this right.”

Latest News

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

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

Erdoğan’s Civil Death Project’ : The ‘politicide’ spanning more than a decade

Fethullah Gülen’s Vision and the Purpose of Hizmet

After Reunion: A Quiet Transformation Within the Hizmet Movement

Erdogan’s Failed Crusade: The World Rejects His War on Hizmet

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

In Case You Missed It

An Armenian lady, Hrant and April 24

Celebrating Ramadan with Turkish asylum seekers

Turkey’s Kurdish question and the Hizmet movement

The witch-hunt reaches Turkey’s media

Turkey’s Reichstag Fire

GYV president Usak passes away in exile

Unlawful acts revealed in police raids on Gülen-inspired schools

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News