Hiring based on ‘color lists’ a violation of Constitution, analysts say


Date posted: February 20, 2014

ANKARA

A public sector employee selection process using personal data to create “color lists” that profiled and separated the candidates into acceptable and non-acceptable categories, as was recently maintained by the Taraf daily, is a violation of the Constitution, analysts have agreed.

“Discrimination is a crime according to the Constitution and international agreements,” Tahir Elçi, head of the Diyarbakır Bar Association, told Today’s Zaman on Thursday.

The Taraf daily published a document on Wednesday as evidence of the government’s policy of hiring public sector employees using “color lists” to avoid employing applicants affiliated with groups such as the Hizmet movement and supporters of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP).

“Documents with information regarding candidates for the post of tax auditor that were maintained on bureaucrats’ computers at the Turkish Tax Inspection Board [VDKB], have been obtained by Taraf and confirm the existence of profiling based on color lists,” the daily said. The publication came in response to a denial of such a practice by Interior Minister Efkan Ala, following a previous report by the newspaper published on Monday.

As well as sympathizers of the Hizmet movement, inspired by Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, and of the CHP, Kurds and those who took part in the Gezi Park demonstrations are also placed on the “red list,” which means that the candidate should not be employed, according to the report.

According to Zafer Üskül, a former deputy of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and a professor of constitutional law, it is clearly against the Constitution to discriminate against citizens based on their religious or political beliefs or their ethnic identity.

Public sector employees are hired following a two-stage process. In the first stage, candidates sit for the Public Personnel Selection Examination (KPSS) and those who pass are invited to attend an oral examination. The Taraf report amply demonstrates that those who are not considered preferred are eliminated in the second stage.

To refute the claims that people are categorized based on their ideological, ethnic or religious identity, Ala had described the daily’s allegations as rumors, saying on Monday: “If there is any information, or documents about [color lists], we would do what needs to be done.”

The document Taraf claims to have features evaluation notes about tax auditor candidates who sat for an entrance exam for the VDKB, part of the Ministry of Finance, in late 2013. The daily claims that the document, a one-page print out, profiles candidates by sorting them onto either a “blue list” or a “red list.”

The report indicated that the candidates were categorized with notations such as “registered in Diyarbakır,” a mainly Kurdish province, or “Father’s name is Ali Haydar,” apparently based on the assumption that the candidate is Alevi — Alevism being considered an unorthodox Muslim sect by some.

The “blue lists,” according to Taraf, were for approved candidates. This list consisted of candidates closely affiliated with the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and those who were affiliated with the National Youth Foundation (MGV), an Islamic charity organization that organized youth activities and provided academic scholarships to students that was closed in the aftermath of the Feb. 28, 1997 coup due to concerns about rising religious fundamentalism.

The Taraf daily reported that “While those candidates who are members of the İlim Yayma Cemiyeti [a religious association with possibly close ties to the ruling party] are put on the blue list in the document, those who are maintained to be nationalist, Alevi or Kurdish are accorded the red color.”

ARABAŞLIK- No response to allegations but ministry slams newspapers

The Finance Ministry, which is at the center of allegations of using these “color lists,” declined to comment on the claims, and instead it described the newspapers that published the news story about extensive profiling of candidates as an “axis of evil.”

A blistering written statement issued by the ministry on Wednesday blasted a number of newspapers — Zaman, Bugün and Taraf – claiming that the dailies are administered from one center and have formed an alliance to produce and spread false news.

“The axis of evil made itself visible,” the statement said, claiming that the evidence shown in the Taraf daily report was fabricated and produced by those who reported the story of profiling at the ministry.

Victims to sue ministry

Taraf also said that some candidates who sat for the entrance exams have obtained the profiling data and are preparing to file a lawsuit against top officials in the Ministry of Finance.

The report provided details of some of the candidate evaluations, allegedly kept hidden on the computers of a very limited number of top bureaucrats in the ministry:

“Ö.G.: Got 86 points on the written exam. Of Kurdish origin and from Muş [province]. Definitely negative [opinion]. Was put on the red list.

N.T.: Got 81.5 points. Was put on the red list, as (s)he is an Alevi who lives in Gaziosmanpaşa.”

Analysts agree that recruitment by such lists is a case of obvious discrimination.

Elçi, with the Diyarbakır Bar Association, said: “When we look at the profiling [done by the ministry], we see that discrimination is there. This is a crime according to the Constitution, the European Convention on Human Rights and other international agreements Turkey has signed. This profiling indicates that the equality of people before the law was violated. We were already aware of this discrimination and now the report has just made it known openly.”

 

İsmail Koncuk, president of the Turkish Public Workers’ Labor Union (Kamu-Sen), said “Profiling of people is done in totalitarian regimes where there is no democracy, no human rights.”

Zafer Üskül, a professor of constitutional law at Doğuş University, told Today’s Zaman: “Article 10 of the Constitution says that everyone is equal before the law. Article 70 of the Constitution bans discrimination when recruiting people; the assessment [of candidates] is to be made based only on the qualifications required by a particular post. Profiling of and discrimination against people is clearly against the Constitution.”

Mustafa Selmanpakoğlu, the head of the Pir Sultan Abdal Foundation, noted: “In the past, Alevis were to be eliminated through the edicts of Ottoman sultans, by fatwas from shaykhs al-islam. During the past 12 years of AK Party rule, threats against Alevis and Alevism have increased. Discrimination became tougher. According to a MİT [National Intelligence Organization] document from 2010 that became public, Alevism is categorized as a terrorist organization.”

Source: Todays Zaman , February 20, 2014


Related News

Carter Center gives certificate of appreciation to Kimse Yok Mu

AYŞE TOSUN, İSTANBUL The personal foundation of former US President Jimmy Carter has awarded a certificate of appreciation to Turkish aid organization Kimse Yok Mu (Is Anybody There) for the association’s worldwide charitable activities. The certificate was presented to Kimse Yok Mu officials in İstanbul by Carter’s consultant, Ryan McDonald, on behalf of the former […]

Turkey’s Economy Suffering Enormous Post-Coup Purges

Since the attempted military coup on July 15, the government, empowered by a state of emergency, has fired or suspended about 125,000 people, of whom nearly 40,000 have been arrested, and tens of thousands of others taken into custody. As a result, roughly 800,000 people have been completely cut off from any economic safety net.

Fethullah Gülen’s response to the ‘clash of civilizations’ thesis

RICHARD PENASKOVIC* If Mr. Huntington is a protagonist for Western civilization, then Mr. Gülen is his counterpart, serving as a spokesperson or champion for moderate Islam. The differences between them are like night and day. Mr. Gülen argues that by creating new enemy fronts, Huntington actually sows the seeds for a clash of civilizations on […]

Erdoğan’s AKP runs out of steam, then what?

We are now in the midst of a system crisis with unprecedented dimensions and unforeseen consequences. Turkey’s fiercely embattled Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is betting whatever the country has gained over the past years on a game of prospects that will either lead to a downfall, or turn the stakes in such favor for himself so as to speed up his irresistible rise to untouchability.

UN and OSCE experts deplore crackdown on journalists and media outlets in Turkey

UN / OSCE: The Government’s purging of personnel and institutions of what it perceives as being dissenting and critical voices, solely on the basis of allegations of membership in the Gülen movement, clearly violates standards of international human rights law.

Dr. Jill Carroll speaks on Fethullah Gulen and The Gulen Movement

Dr. Jill Carroll, author of the book A Dialogue of Civilizations: Gülen’s Islamic Ideals and Humanistic Discourse, speaks at the lecture and book signing event in Chicago at Niagara Foundation. Dr. Carroll talks about the components that lead her to write the book and provides valuable insight on its context and content. Fethullah Gulen is […]

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

Kimse Yok Mu continues to help needy despite gov’t restrictions

Turkey’s Ongoing Crackdown: nearly 13,000 police officers suspended for alleged links to the Gulen movement

Fear Grows in Turkey as Crackdown on Gulen Followers Continues

Turkey dismisses another 330 academics, brings total to 7,316

A Shared Struggle: Muslim and Jewish fasters break it together

Disabled woman loses health care due to son-in-law’s Gülen links

Saudi scholar finds what he has been looking for in Gulen

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News