Dozens of US Congress members urge Kerry to press Turkey for freer media

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan meets with US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) meet at the Çankaya presidential palace on Sept. 12, 2014.(Photo: Reuters)
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan meets with US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) meet at the Çankaya presidential palace on Sept. 12, 2014.(Photo: Reuters)


Date posted: February 6, 2015

A large number of members of the US Congress have voiced concerns on the recent arrest of media members in Turkey and called on Secretary of State John Kerry to press the Turkish government to secure press freedom in the country.

In a letter to Kerry, 89 members of Congress stated that they are “deeply concerned” with the recent arrest of journalists, underlining the Turkish government’s steps to “intimidate, arrest and smother” critical voices as being a threat to the very democratic principles that Turkey claims to respect.

The congressional members mentioned a Dec. 14 operation that targeted the managers of the Zaman and Samanyolu media outlets, saying the charges faced by Zaman Editor-in-Chief Ekrem Dumanlı and Samanyolu TV General Manager Hidayet Karaca are “questionable.”

On Dec. 14 of last year, Karaca was detained as part of a police operation that also targeted Dumanlı, police officers, scriptwriters, producers and directors on charges of heading a terrorist group based on a TV series that was broadcast years ago on Samanyolu. The İstanbul 1st Criminal Court of Peace ruled on Dec. 19, 2014 for the arrest of Karaca and three former police officers.

The US politicians also listed concerns with the blocking of scores of tweets from Turkish journalists and media outlets after a complaint was filed by a judge over a news story shared through the social media platform. It said some 400 people were monitored on Twitter and “ultimately Turkish access to the social media [site] was blocked.”

Underlining the Turkish government’s earlier attempts to silence opposition voices, the members of Congress said that “recent arrests have had a chilling effect on freedom, democracy, and economic prosperity for all of Turkey.”

“… we strongly urge you to reach out to President [Recep Tayyip] Erdoğan and his administration to encourage a peaceful and appropriate resolution to these cases. A free media must be supported and protected to foster an environment open to constructive political discussion and to ensure freedom of expression for all the Turkish people,” the Congress members said in the letter to Kerry.

Stressing that Turkey is a strategic ally to the US in the Middle East and a key member of NATO, the politicians expressed hope to see the Turkish government “abandon this course of intimidation and embrace a free press and tolerance of dissenting voices.”

“It is our priority to encourage the Turkish government to fulfill the responsibilities and obligations to their own people,” they said.
Republican Rep. Matt Salmon of Arizona, Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II of Missouri, Democratic Rep. Ted Lieu of California and Democratic Rep. Alan Grayson of Florida are also among the many signatories of the letter.

In addition, US-based watchdog Freedom House has stated that Turkey has drifted further from democratic reforms, with former Prime Minister Erdoğan rising to the presidency and overseeing government attempts to quash corruption cases against his allies and associates as well as greater interference in the media and judiciary.

Releasing its annual “Freedom in the World 2015” report on Jan. 28, Freedom House, which describes itself as “an independent watchdog organization dedicated to the expansion of freedom around the world,” heavily criticized the anti-democratic developments in Turkey.

The report, in its section on Europe, stated that in Turkey, Erdoğan “consolidated power during the year and waged an increasingly aggressive campaign against democratic pluralism.”

“He openly demanded that media owners censor coverage or fire critical journalists, told the Constitutional Court he does not respect its rulings, threatened reporters (and rebuked women journalists) and ordered radical, even bizarre changes to the school curriculum. Having risen from the premiership to the presidency in August, he formed a ‘shadow cabinet’ that allows him to run the country from the presidential palace, circumventing constitutional rules and the ministries of his own party’s government,” the report stated.

Erdoğan’s remarks from March 2014 about Twitter were highlighted in the report, in a section titled “Democracy’s opponents,” with a picture of Erdoğan next to it. “We’ll eradicate Twitter. Everyone will witness the power of the Turkish state,” Erdoğan had said in March.

Turkey was listed as a “partly free” country in the report in terms of freedoms in the world and received a rating of 3.5 — 1 being the worst and 7 being the best. Turkey received a 4 in terms of civil liberties and a 3 on political rights. Turkey received a downward trend arrow in the report as well, due to “more pronounced political interference in anticorruption mechanisms and judicial processes, and greater tensions between majority Sunni Muslims and minority Alevis.”

In terms of press freedoms, Turkey was already among the “not free” countries in the most recent press freedom report, which Freedom House released last year. This year’s report also highlighted Erdoğan’s intensified campaign against media freedom and civil society as evidence of growing disdain for democratic standards in the world, along with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s rollback of democratic gains and Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

Source: Today's Zaman , February 05, 2015


Related News

Erdogan and Gulen: Inevitable Clash?

Unlike Turkey’s classical Islamic activists, Gulen always distanced himself from politics, and like Said Nursi, his main source of inspiration, his message was focused on grassroots social activism, most importantly an education combining both Islam and modern science. Hizmet’s main goal was social: raising a new “golden” generation fusing moderate Muslim and Modern ethics to become the backbone of Turkey’s society and bureaucracy and its messengers to the world.

President Gül hosts Turkish Olympiad students in Ankara

YASİN KILIÇ, ANKARA President Abdullah Gül hosted a group of students coming to Turkey as part of the 11th International Turkish Olympiad, a festival that celebrates the Turkish language and this year brought together 2,000 students from 140 countries around the world, in the capital on Friday. The Turkish Olympiad, which is organized by the […]

Education minister in Jamaica joins Kimse Yok Mu to feed needy

The humanitarian relief organization Kimse Yok Mu Foundation extended a helping hand to the needy in the Central American country Jamaica. The donations arrived in the country located in the Caribbean Sea after a long flight from Turkey.

Judiciary acts in line with legally unfounded police report to describe Hizmet as terrorist

A National Police Department report accusing the Gülen movement of being a terrorist organization without any solid evidence is being treated as a document not to be questioned by the judiciary, which apparently views it as an “instruction” by higher-ups, recent investigations have indicated.

Turkish Cultural Center to hold ‘Henna Night’ fundraiser for water well construction in Africa

The Turkish Cultural Center of West Haven will hold a “Henna Night” fundraiser — for ladies only — Saturday night to raise money to benefit Embrace Relief’s projects to build water wells to provide clean drinking water for villages in Africa.

Professor Wagner: With Gülen, the key is love

Today’s Zaman interviewed Wagner about his recent book and his insights about Fethullah Gülen. Prof. Walter Wagner says: “There was a Hitler, there was a Stalin, and there was an Osama bin Laden. We must be very careful and we must examine the heart. In Gülen’s case, the key is love. If the charismatic leader does not lead you to love, does not lead you to acceptance. People are hungry for such leadership.

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

Turkey’s permanent state of crisis

Gülen among TIME magazine’s 100 most influential people

Conference declares gov’t needs to be more active in preventing domestic violence

Local priests participate in landmark interfaith trip to Turkey

Parents seek TL 40,000 in damages for violation of students’ educational rights

Kimse Yok Mu distributes meat with foreign volunteers in Indonesia

Gülen offers condolences for police officer, resident

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News