Arresting police to make Erdoğan happy

Emre Uslu
Emre Uslu


Date posted: August 1, 2014

It is no secret that under the direction of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan police officers who conducted graft operations against his close associates have been detained.

In the process of their detention the police officers were handcuffed, which is not a normal procedure for such cases, put under a great deal of psychological pressure, paraded before the media as if they were guilty, arrested in the middle of the night — at 2 a.m. — right before suhur, when people get up and eat as part of the Ramadan fast. This time is considered prime time for TV stations during the month of Ramadan. Then they are not released after the four-day legal detention period is over.

While the police, prosecutors, and the judge who was recently handpicked by the Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) were violating the arrested officers’ rights, Erdoğan and his media outlets continued to fabricate new lies about them. Erdoğan’s long-standing claim against the police officers was that they had committed treason. He also claimed that they are foreign spies dedicated to toppling his government on behalf of foreign powers, implying that the officers work for Israel and the US.

For a reasonable person there is no validity to his claims, but his conspiracy theories and lies work in Turkey because most people in this country believe conspiracy theories over the actual facts on the ground. People here complain about the West and foreign powers when they face challenges in their everyday lives. Thus, Erdoğan’s strategy of linking these officers to the West and accusing them of spying was an effective one to deceive the people. In fact, he has convinced his followers of this.

Yet the prosecutors and the judge who were handpicked by Erdoğan’s government did not ask a single question about spying or any other of Erdoğan’s claims. The accusations that were addressed to the police officers were those of forging documents and wiretapping phone conversations. They were not even asked if they were members of the Gülen movement.

In Turkey’s dirty political climate it may seem natural to hear ridiculous accusations coming out of Erdoğan’s poisonous language. However, it was completely unexpected that the prosecutors and the judge would not raise questions concerning what Erdoğan had been accusing these officers of.

Perhaps those questions were not asked of the officers because there is not a single shred of evidence that could be put in the files of the officers. Yet the prosecutors and the judge need to fulfill the duty for which they were hand picked. Therefore, they are trying to find any wrongdoing that these officers might have committed as police officers.

Since the prosecutors and judge are determined to arrest these officers for the benefit of Erdoğan’s political project, they are trying to do everything possible to show that these officers are guilty.

They commit human rights violations, cross the lines, break many laws and encourage other officers to commit crimes for two reasons: to provide an immediate political benefit to Erdoğan’s presidential election campaign and to scare off the supporters of the Gülen movement.

Whether or not Erdoğan will reap the benefits he is hoping for is a different story. I think he will solidify his base of supporters by telling them he has kept his election promise by punishing the officers. I don’t think the psychological torture and systematic humiliation of those officers, exposing them to the world as if they are guilty, will bring any more votes to Erdoğan. However, he needs to “do something” to be able to tell his supporters that he is “fighting a dangerous enemy” and needs their strong support.

However, I do not think he will be able to scare off the supporters of the Gülen movement. However, he may be able to affect those conservative people who think that supporting the Gülenists might harm their interests.

Soon, when the trials begin, it is very likely that those officers will be released because they were kept in jail to make Erdoğan happy.

Source: Today's Zaman , July 30, 2014


Related News

What else should Gülen say?

Fethullah Gülen’s stance on corruption and anti-democratic practices has never changed. Osman Şimşek, the editor of herkul.org, which broadcasts and publishes Gülen’s speeches, recently published a letter that Gülen sent to Erdoğan in May 2006. In the letter, Gülen warns the prime minister that his government had begun to deviate from its democratic line.

Fetullah Gülen, the preferred enemy – Interview

Hizmet is an Islamic movement with activities in more than 180 countries. To its followers, the gulenists, Gulen — a man with swallow feet and low voice who says he spends most of his time praying and studying — is a democrat in favor of the Turkish democratization.

Turkey crackdown: deep unease in Fethullah Gulen’s home village

“They were a family of thinkers,” said a dairy farmer in the village who asked not to be named as he feared repercussions from the authorities. “They were good people. They came from nowhere, they had no water, nothing,” he says, pointing out the Gulen family’s former home, made from clay and rocks.

Erdogan: A saint elsewhere, outside Turkey’s shores?

On a recent trip to Spain, I picked a copy of the International New York Times, and saw a story that shocked me greatly. It said Mr Erdogan had ordered the release of 38,000 prisoners serving various jail terms, for different offences, in order to make space for the so-called coup plotters who had no space in Turkey’s overflowing prison. I was totally shocked by the news because I can’t imagine a situation where convicted criminals are being set free just so political opponents can be locked up.

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.

Kimse Yok Mu delivers iftar meals to homes

Turkish charity organization Kimse Yok Mu (KYM) delivers fast-breaking (iftar) meals for the needy families in their homes during the holy month of Ramadan. In the central province of Kayseri, volunteers from the KYM have been distributing iftar meal to the families in five neighborhoods which received great appreciation.

Latest News

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

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

S.A. nun speaks at the U.N. on Gulen

Turkish President calls for calm as gov’t defuses tension with Gülen movement

MGK plan in action

Kimse Yok Mu humanitarian aid organization makes it to top 100 NGOs

Report: White House denies remarks attributed to Obama about Gülen

Ayan: Halkbank operated like Iran’s Central Bank

AK Party’s social media instructions to ministries raise questions of legality

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News