‘Parallel state’ and ‘theft of national will’

BÜLENT KENEŞ
BÜLENT KENEŞ


Date posted: January 30, 2014

BÜLENT KENEŞ

The recent developments have demystified the millions of people living Turkey who have long been deceived by lies about the country being an “advanced democracy” and a “strong economy.” But the “parallel state” and the “theft of the national will” are still here. But take it easy! Do not be easily concerned! Just bear with me to see if I am saying the same thing as the inventors of the parallel state and theft-of-the-national-will arguments….

Legitimacy is what distinguishes a state as an organizational form from crime syndicates, interest groups and terrorist organizations. And what endows the state with legitimacy in democratic regimes in the first instance is that the will that governs the state apparatus is the manifestation of national will. The second factor for legitimacy is that this will that is brought to power by the public must rely on laws and stick to fair administration of justice in all of its acts and actions. Now, let us analyze the recent incidents in our country from this perspective.

As everyone knows, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has been acting with the motto “Offense is the best form of defense” since the eruption of the biggest corruption scandal in the history of the Turkish Republic on Dec. 17, 2013. He perceives the Hizmet movement — which has never engaged in any criminal or illegitimate act so far — as the actor behind the graft investigations and accuses the members of this movement as running a “parallel state,” i.e., a state within the state.

Oddly enough, about one-and-a-half months have passed since he spouted the “parallel state” lie so as to hurt millions of people, but has failed to produce any concrete evidence about these allegations or kick off any judicial investigation into them. In spite of this, Prime Minister Erdoğan and senior government officials continue to parrot the parallel state slander with an ever-increasing intensity on every TV program or rally they attend or in every statement that they make. Moreover, they do not just stop at this unfair, unfounded, empty and vulgar slander, but also move on to accuse the volunteers of this large civil society movement having education-centered facilities in 160 countries around the world of being members of a “gang” or a “crime syndicate.” Apparently, they didn’t just settle for this slanderous accusation and proceeded to hurl the lowliest accusation at the world’s most humanitarian and most peaceful civil society volunteers, i.e., likening them to the “Hashashin.” These accusations and slanders will definitely have certain short-term and long-term consequences. I hope the ruling party and its close circles which have allegedly indulged in corruption and theft up to their ears will not be happy with the results of the first election.

As I noted above, a state’s essential characteristic is its democratic legitimacy and the compliance of its acts with the substantive law. There is not a single piece of concrete evidence indicating that prosecutors and police officers had acted in contravention of laws and regulations in the investigation into the corruption claims that implicated some former Cabinet members and their sons. However, these public officials who performed their lawful duties in full compliance with the principles of transparency, accountability and equality — which are fundamental characteristics of the regimes that uphold the rule of law — were recklessly accused by the prime minister and his cronies of being the “parallel state.” While those who fulfill their lawful and democratic duties do not indulge in unlawful or arbitrary acts, there is a ton of evidence showing that the government has been acting arbitrarily, lawfully and illegitimately for the last one-and-a-half months.

Now, the first question: who can claim that the prosecutors, judges and police chiefs who acted within the framework of laws, who fulfilled their responsibilities as defined by laws and who rely on the law to perform their duties are actually part of the “parallel state”?

The second and more scandalous question is: If a political party which was democratically elected to office completely ignores the principle of the separation of powers — a fundamental characteristic of a democratic regime — and disrupts the checks and balances mechanisms of a legitimate democratic system; if it acts in complete disregard of rules, laws, norms, ethics and conventions; if it violates the principle of presuming innocence with slanders such as “parallel state,” “gang” and “Hashashin,” and “dens” and subjects thousands of police officers, public servants and hundreds of members of the judiciary to an unprecedented spree of extrajudicial treatment; and if it resorts to brute force in a manner comparable only to unlawful fiefdoms of the Middle Ages and uses unlawful and vulgar methods to cover up corruption, bribery and theft investigations and obscure evidence, doesn’t this party then deserve to be referred to as the “parallel state”?

If laws and democratic rules are what make a state a legitimate democratic one, who deserves to be labeled the “parallel state”? Those who act in compliance with the laws — which constitute the user’s guide or even the spirit of the organs of this state, or those who act outside the legitimate legal framework by abiding by the controversial religious “endorsements” or fatwas? In my opinion, the answer to this critical question is quite clear. How you answer it is entirely up to you.

Moreover, Prime Minister Erdoğan opts to define the graft investigation — which some of his relatives, some members of his government and some bureaucrats close to him are implicated in corruption, fraud, irregularity, favoritism, bribery and theft — as a coup attempt against his government. Furthermore, he asks, “Do you know what real theft is?” and answers, “It is the theft of the national will.” In recent weeks, Erdoğan has parroted this rhetoric more frequently. Apparently, he deeply believes in this rhetoric… You may be surprised once again, but the prime minister is right in this rhetoric. Indeed, he closely knows who those thieves who have “stolen the national will” are. Let me explain:

The prime minister has persistently boosted the electoral support for his party in every election he has entered. Fulfilling the promises he made in his party’s program has certainly played a great role in this success. Many people from different walks of life have lent support to these democratization reforms. My new question is: To what extent did Prime Minister Erdoğan fulfill the promises he made during the last election rallies? Is he occupied with fulfilling his election manifesto promises or is he obsessed with the diametrically opposite of these promises?

For instance, did Prime Minister Erdoğan tell us in the run-up to the parliamentary elections of June 12, 2011 that he intends to make the high judiciary — which had been democratized with the constitutional amendments endorsed with the referendum held on Sept. 12, 2010 — more lawless and more anti-democratic? What did he promise about transparency, accountability? Did he say that these notions do not go well with Turkey and that he would disable all sorts of supervision and review mechanisms, including the Court of Accounts? Did anyone remember him promising to quickly amend the match-fixing law — which had been amended only six months ago — in order to save his relatives who would be punished under the same law? Did he ever talk about introducing the 4+4+4 system in education or shuttering prep schools? Did he make promises about rapidly and frequently amending the public procurement law in order to award contracts to pro-government businessmen? Did he signal that he would introduce radical reductions in penalties for violations of corruption and irregularities in public procurement tenders? Do you remember him ever promising to disregard checks and balances and render the judiciary dysfunctional and turn the state into an authoritarian clan state with is arbitrary decisions? Did he say that he would abandon the substantive law that is binding for everyone and adopt, instead, controversial religious fatwas? What did he do to fulfill his much-advertised promise to draft a democratic constitution?

Perhaps, the easiest thing we can do nowadays is to make a list of the things Erdoğan had promised to do before the elections and the things he didn’t promise, but is trying to do with full might and main. He promises more democracy, more rule of law, more freedoms, more transparency and accountability, a new constitution and EU harmonization before the elections. But he runs after authoritarian and arbitrary governance methods and anachronistic ambitions after the elections. So tell me, for God’s sake, who is the one stealing and deceiving the national will?

Source: Todays Zaman , January 30, 2014


Related News

Parents protest deportation of Pak-Turk School’s teachers, staff

Slamming the government’s decision of deporting Turkish teachers and staff from the country, parents said “Pak-Turk Schools were founded without any financial assistance of Turkey and Pakistani government but founded by the philanthropist donations of people of Pakistan and Turkey” adding that these schools were the property of Pakistani people.

Turkey: ‘Exclusion for all’ state

Indeed, just last week a columnist in a pro-government daily argued that officials in certain government institutions have been expelled over their alleged ties to the Hizmet movement. This is no different from a witch hunt. In a civilized society, expelling qualified professionals because of their sympathy for a religious and social movement can only be described as discrimination.

Gülen’s followers banned from mosque in Germany

According to a video posted by Mehmet Cerit, the editor of Zaman Vandaag, an overseas subsidiary of the government-seized Turkish daily Zaman, a man is seen turning away the people whom he considered Hizmet members, just before the Friday prayer in a mosque in Germany.

Lynching of the Hizmet movement by the hand of the state

The community [the Hizmet movement] is being lynched, and the state is using its power to do it. The same tactic has been used in the claims of mass wiretapping. The prosecutors involved in the investigation have denied the claims, but the black propaganda campaign has been going on for two days.

Cingöz: Kimse Yok Mu welcomes all auditors from state institutions

İsmail Cingöz, president of the Turkish charity Kimse Yok Mu (Is Anybody There), which is affiliated with the Hizmet movement inspired by prominent scholar Fethullah Gülen, explained to Today’s Zaman that the organization has contributed to social and international peace since the day of its foundation.

What’s Friendship Got to Do With [Mr. Gulen’s] Extradition?

On a visit to Washington to lobby for Gülen’s extradition, Nationalist Action party parliamentarian Kamil Aydin expressed his belief that “America is going to refuse losing Turkey as a good partnership in the region.” But even if Turkish politicians do not believe that America operates according to the rule of law, they should at least be aware that most Americans are proud to think that it does.

Latest News

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

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

Fethullah Gülen’s Vision and the Purpose of Hizmet

In Case You Missed It

Fethullah Gülen lawsuit [in the US] thrown out in setback for Turkey’s Erdoğan

Local Turks [in Chicago] fear for safety of friends, family overseas after failed coup

Zaman journalists defy threat of arrest with heads held high

Erdoğan has to respect civil society

Why do they lie about Fethullah Gülen?

Gülen files criminal complaint over illegal wiretapping

Turkish businessmen’s helping hands reach out to Romanian flood victims

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News