EU’s Flautre says PM Erdoğan’s harsh words against Hizmet not acceptable


Date posted: February 21, 2014

BRUSSELS

Hélène Flautre, the co-chairwoman of the EU-Turkey Joint Parliamentary Committee, has criticized Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s harsh rhetoric against the Hizmet movement, saying that Erdoğan’s use of labels such as “traitor,” “virus” and “assassin” are simply not acceptable.

“Such rhetoric from the mouth of the prime minister can never be accepted,” said Flautre in an exclusive interview on STVHaber’s “European Desk” recently. “I see these remarks as a sign of weakness [on the part of Erdoğan],” she added.

Flautre also said members of the European Parliament did not find it acceptable that Erdoğan described the corruption probe as a conspiracy against his government orchestrated by what he called a “parallel state” within the judiciary and the police — and this organization’s foreign collaborators.

Flautre said that Erdoğan had tried to defend himself while he was in Brussels by saying that “there is no need for judicial investigation and this investigation was fiction.” She said Erdoğan’s claim was not credible.

Stressing that there have been efforts to prevent the corruption investigation from moving forward, Flautre described the situation as alarming “because Turks are losing their trust in their own institutions.”

The co-chairwoman of the EU-Turkey Joint Parliamentary Committee also emphasized that if there is a “parallel state,” as Erdoğan claims, this should be investigated within the rule of law. She said European democrats are disturbed by the fact that the government framed the debate in terms of a parallel state before there was any transparent and clear investigation into the accusations.

Erdoğan’s government has reassigned thousands of police officers, including many senior chiefs and hundreds of prosecutors and judges in what was seen as a move to stall the corruption investigations. The government also curbed Internet freedoms and pushed a controversial bill through Parliament to increase its control over the judiciary.

The rushed legislation came in response to a corruption probe that shook the prime minister’s Cabinet. Four ministers implicated in the investigation, which went public with a wave of detentions on Dec. 17, were replaced in a broader government reshuffle. But despite the resignations of the ministers, the public discussion on corruption did not fade away.

Flautre also said the deportation of Today’s Zaman correspondent and blogger Mahir Zeynalov from Turkey over his tweets criticizing the government represented a new peak in pressure on the media in Turkey.

Source: Todays Zaman , February 21, 2014


Related News

Organization (Kimse Yok Mu?) helped 79 Syrian families

“Is Anybody There?” Organization officials delivered donations, blankets and food to Syrian families with the coordination of AFAD (Disaster and Emergency Management Department) officials. The president of “Is Anybody There?” Elazig branch, Mr. Onder Colak, noted that they have been making donations to Syrian refugees in Turkey since the first days of civil war outbreak in Syria.

Who staged a coup against whom on Dec. 17?

When its involvement in corruption and bribery became public, and that this seemed like the tip of an iceberg, the government thought that it must cover up the subsequent investigation, fearing that yet more investigations would be started — and so crushed the police force and the judiciary like a steamroller.

Islamic scholar Gülen rejects involvement with graft probe and wiretappings

“If among those who conducted the graft investigations were some people who might be connected to the Hizmet movement, was I supposed to tell these people, ‘Turn a blind eye to the corruption charges?’ It appears to me that some people were expecting me to do this. Did they expect me to do this? How can I say something that would ruin my afterlife? How else can I act?” Fethullah Gülen said.

Minister: Turkish gov’t racks up $5 bln in confiscation of Gülen-linked properties

The value of immovable properties including dormitories, real estates and schools that the government has confiscated as part of its clampdown against Gülen movement so far, totals around TL 15 billion or $4.9 billion, according to Environment and Urban Planning Minister Mehmet Özhaseki.

Paris attacks, New Turkey and oppressing Hizmet

After the barbaric terrorist attacks in Paris, daily life in many European cities has been substantially challenged.

Islamic Renaissance in the Contemporary World

Dr. Muzaffar K. Awan April 2006 On November 12th and 13th, 2005 during a two-day international symposium at Rice University in Houston, Texas, I personally witnessed a Turkish Muslim intellectual’s contributions to the welfare of humanity being appreciated at the helm of an academic attention, and through debates of global scale. The symposium was attended […]

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

More than 60 countries attend panel organized by GYV at UN

Persecution of the Gülen Movement in Turkey

Gulen Institute Youth Platfrom announces essay contest: ‘Hospitality in the Global Village’

Turkish School strengthens ties with Turkmenistan

Turkish police brutally torture suspect over Gulen links

Unproven speculations and legitimate questions

Peshawar High Court halts government order to deport Pak-Turk school staff

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News