Abrupt gov’t decision to revoke status of Kimse Yok Mu draws criticism

Kimse Yok Mu President İsmail Cingöz addresses a press conference at the headquarters of the charity group on Thursday. (Photo: Cihan)
Kimse Yok Mu President İsmail Cingöz addresses a press conference at the headquarters of the charity group on Thursday. (Photo: Cihan)


Date posted: October 6, 2014

ALİ ASLAN KILIÇ / ANKARA

Turkey’s leading charity, Kimse Yok Mu (Is Anybody There), had its right to collect charitable donations abruptly rescinded on Tuesday, in what seems to be an arbitrary decision made during a Cabinet meeting, prompting harsh reactions from volunteers, lawmakers of the opposition parties and representatives of other civil society groups.

On Monday, the Taraf daily ran a story arguing that the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government planned to remove Kimse Yok Mu’s public interest status, which would prevent it from collecting donations. The report indicated that the proposal was pending with the Cabinet and it was expected to take effect after being published in the Official Gazette following the Eid al-Adha holiday, which will begin on Saturday.

However, the decision came even before the holiday, when the group might ordinarily expect to collect a considerable amount of donations. İsmail Cingöz, the president of Kimse Yok Mu, announced the Cabinet decision via his official Twitter account on Thursday. Kimse Yok Mu will not be able to collect donations from the public.

Kimse Yok Mu had made an official statement on Monday harshly criticizing the rumored decision, as there are no legal grounds for it. “We do not want to believe that the government would be part of such a plot against our organization,” the group said in its statement.

Prior to issuing this statement, Kimse Yok Mu held a press conference on Monday morning. Kimse Yok Mu Secretary-General Savaş Metin said the government’s goal of removing the association’s status of being in the “public interest” — which allows it to collect funds without receiving permission from the government — is a politically motivated move. The organization is a humanitarian NGO and strictly apolitical.

Kimse Yok Mu is the only aid organization in Turkey that holds UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) special consultative status, and it began to develop internationally recognized relief programs in partnership with the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in 2013. It was also awarded the Turkish Grand National Assembly Outstanding Service Award in 2013, under AK Party rule.

However, a campaign to smear the organization was launched after the Dec. 17, 2013 government corruption investigation of leading AK Party figures became public. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who was previously prime minister and AK Party chairman, has targeted Kimse Yok Mu, which is affliated with the Hizmet movement due to an apparent government grudge against the grassroots Hizmet movement which it holds responsible for the corruption investigation.

Opposition lashes out at arbitrary decision

Opposition parties in Parliament also reacted to the arbitrary move, which is considered to be part of a government witch hunt against the faith-based Hizmet movement and any institution affiliated with it in response to the corruption scandal that has implicated Erdoğan and his family as well as former ministers and others.

Republican People’s Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, who spoke to Today’s Zaman, criticized the policy of intimidation used against Kimse Yok Mu, referring to a report prepared by auditors and noting that not a single irregularity was discovered in the activities of the charity organization. He went on to say: “We, as the CHP do not want any charity organization that aids needy people to be punished. If no evidence was found during the investigation of the organization, then prohibiting its activities is not right. Maybe, the minister signed a blank piece of paper without knowing that it had been prepared to stop the organization’s activities. [Deputy Prime Minister and government spokesman Bülent] Arınç should leave his post. Either he signs documents without reading them, or he lies. Who knows how many documents he signed this way? Preventing Kimse Yok Mu from collecting donations just prior to the Eid al-Adha holiday is not appropriate, especially when those who are waiting for aid are considered.”

A report drawn up by the Interior Ministry inspectors in early 2014 indicated that no malpractice was found in the activities of Kimse Yok Mu at the conclusion of the ministry audit.

Evaluating the government ban on Kimse Yok Mu for Today’s Zaman, CHP deputy chairman Mehmet Bekaroğlu said that the decision has two aspects. “First, Arınç rejected the Cabinet decision and said a civil society group’s charitable activities could not be stopped without providing the legal basis for such action. Since it has been revealed that the Cabinet made such decision in opposition to Arınç’s former statements, I feel sorry for him. Secondly, the decision’s anti-democratic feature should be focused on. The activities of any association or charitable organization cannot be barred without reason in presumed democracies. I do not know whether a legal basis was provided in the decision, but it is unacceptable to limit a charitable organization’s activities if there is no legitimate cause,” Bekaroğlu said.

Ruhsar Demirel, a deputy chairwoman of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), also criticized the government’s decision to withdraw Kimse Yok Mu’s authority to collect donations, saying: “Given the government spokesman’s [Arınç] announcement early this week saying that ‘no decision has been made about Kimse Yok Mu,’ if it is now revealed that such a decision was already made, then it means that we face a dire situation. If Arınç was correct in his statement, so was the decision not made by the Cabinet? Or, how can Arınç, if he is not aware of what was discussed in the Cabinet, be called the government spokesman?”

Questioning the possibility of a higher authority being involved in the decision about Kimse Yok Mu, Demirel went on: “The source of the decision should be enquired about. How can such arbitrary decisions dominate the state’s mechanisms?

Nurettin Aktaş, a former AK Party deputy, also slammed the government’s move and Arınç’s contradictory statements on the matter, “Once again, Arınç was put in the position of being a lying politician with this recent incident. But the main point is how can a government dare to block a charity that has been extending a hand to needy people for years instead of rewarding it? The prohibition overtly stems from its hostile feelings for the Hizmet movement. No state can be governed with a hostile attitude.”

When rumors that the government was preparing to put a stop to Kimse Yok Mu’s activities circulated in the media earlier, Arınç had ruled it out on Tuesday during a press conference that followed a weekly Cabinet meeting, saying: “Arbitrary action cannot be taken against it [Kimse Yok Mu]. You cannot say that you gave [Kimse Yok Mu] the authority to collect donations yesterday but that you are removing that authority today. There must be legal grounds for this [action]. If this happens, then the administrators of this organization may seek the fulfillment of their legal rights in court against the Cabinet.”

Arınç said there must be the proper legal basis to revoke the public interest status of Kimse Yok Mu, the largest volunteer and global aid organization based in Turkey.

Kimse Yok mu files three criminal complaints

The organization’s lawyer, Muhammet Enes Hazır, announced that the three criminal complaints were filed against the decision barring Kimse Yok Mu from collecting donations.

“The decision-making process was not carried out transparently and some officials were tools in conducting this unlawful practice. We have appealed to the Council of State with a request for a suspension of execution. Also, the organization has filed a criminal complaint against Interior Minister Efkan Ala and some ministry officials, as well as against several members of the media for their fabricated reports and defamation campaign against Kimse Yok Mu,” Hazır said.

Hazır also said that the organization had filed a complaint seeking compensation for damages worth TL 1.1 billion.

Kimse Yok Mu operates in 113 countries around the world. Erdoğan and several of his ministers previously participated in many of the organization’s programs and praised its activities. For instance, Erdoğan joined one Kimse Yok Mu campaign to seek a solution to Somalia’s dire drought problem, and said, “Like our ancestors, we will help these needy people.”

Public figures declare support for Kimse Yok Mu

Several public figures who previously took part in Kimse Yok Mu’s charitable activities as volunteers have declared support for the organization. Singer Atilla Taş stressed that he had personally witnessed the organization’s humanitarian aid work many times, and director Hamdi Alkan said, “The world is becoming uninhabitable if we prevent charitable movements from working instead of supporting them.”

Poet Yavuz Bülent Bakiler described the Cabinet’s decision as cruelty, and added: “What the organization has faced is totally embarrassing. Mixing politics with such valuable charitable activities is a great shame for our people, our state and for humanity.”

Source: Today's Zaman , October 2, 2014


Related News

Turkish family drowned in Aegean Sea while escaping from Erdogan regime

Victims of Erdogan regime are increasing everyday as there has not been an effective mechanism preventing him. A Turkish Family with three children drowned in Aegean Sea while escaping from Erdogan’ autocratic regime as they had last their hope to survive in Turkey.

Gulistan schools in Kosovo to continue education despite its abducted teachers

Gulistan Educational Institutions has declared that they will continue their activities despite their abducted teachers. 5 of their teachers were abducted by Turkish Intelligence Agency in cooperation with Kosovo’s intel agency, which shocked the global education community and protested in many countries including USA, Canada, and UK.

Turkish anti-terrorism police carried out raids in six cities, detaining at least five people with alleged links to al-Qaida

The police raid “is a deliberate attack on the IHH,” said Yasar Kutluay, the group’s secretary general. “They are trying to portray the group as an organization with links to terrorism.” He blamed Israel and Gulen’s supporters, for the operation — a charge Gulen’s movement immediately rejected as “slander and false incrimination.”

Astonishing questions about the failed coup attempt in Turkey

Critics claim that this failed coup attempt was simply a pretext to legitimize arbitrary authoritarian practices, eliminate all the dissent while filling the state apparatus with staunch supporters, and start an ethnic cleansing against sympathizers of the Gulen movement and Alawites.

‘Nigerians and their leaders won’t fall for Erdogan’s harebrained gambit’

…since at least 1998 Turkey has established its presence in Nigeria as one of the biggest outside forces for development in our education and health sectors. Today its 16 non-denominational Nigeria-Turkish international primary and secondary schools spread across Nigeria in Abuja, Kaduna, Lagos, Kano, Ogun and Yobe states – and with plans for more – are among the very best in the country.

NTIC’s growing support help 13000 underprivileged children

Throughout our 18 year history, NTIC (Nigerian Turkish International Colleges) demonstrated a continued hard work in providing educational opportunities to the less privileged students through NTIC Foundation.

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

The Hizmet movement, social democracy, the religious left

Watson points to new authoritarianism in Turkish gov’t’s relations

Debunking The Gülen-Erdoğan Relationship

Turkish intelligence staged a rocket attack on Erdoğan’s palace to rally public support

Fethullah Gülen’s message to his sympathizers in the aftermath of the coup attempt

Kimse Yok Mu soup kitchen to serve weekly hot meal in Somalia

Islamic scholars convene at ijtihad symposium in İstanbul

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News