Commentary: Abuses rampant in wake of Turkish coup

The Rev. Chris Heavner, campus pastor for the Lutheran Campus Ministry at Clemson.
The Rev. Chris Heavner, campus pastor for the Lutheran Campus Ministry at Clemson.


Date posted: August 5, 2016

CHRIS HEAVNER

There is much we don’t know about last week’s attempted coup in Turkey.  We don’t know who was behind the coup; we don’t know why it was so quickly discovered and put down; we don’t know whether the will of the people was defended or if their hopes were crushed.

One of the reasons we don’t know as much as we would like to know is the treatment of journalists in Turkey.  Incarceration rates are much higher than should be tolerated in a free society.  Those who choose to ask probing questions (particularly if they are Turkish) are arrested, jailed, and rendered unemployable.  The Greenville News reported the shutdown of “scores of media outlets, including three new agencies, 16 television channels and 45 newspapers.”

What we do know is that President Tayyip Erogan has said the coup attempt may in the end be a gift from God.  Whether it is a gift from God, it has certainly become an opportunity for Erogan to purge from positions of responsibility those whom he perceives as his political enemies.

Those whom he is removing are affiliated with a Turkish cleric by the name of Fethullah Gulen.  Gulen’s ministry has created a movement in Turkey (and around the world) known as Hizmet (or the Service.)  I don’t know a lot about last week’s coup attempt in Turkey, but I do know many in the Hizmet movement.  And I am worried that Erogan might also punish them.

With Hizmet, our Lutheran Campus Ministry group has distributed meat to low income families on Eid al-Adha. Together, we have prepared “Noah’s Pudding” on Ashura and handed out portions to 500 persons on the Clemson campus as a sign of hospitality and generosity.  I have traveled to Turkey with high school students, awarded a free trip by Hizmet-affiliated groups, in recognition of the high school students’ written and artistic expressions of global unity and harmony.

We don’t know a lot.  But what we do know should cause us to ask our elected officials to look carefully at any request for extradition for Fethullah Gulen. We don’t know everything, but we know that the post-coup crackdown has included public appeals “to be protected from the evil things of educated people.” Nearly 60,000 have been detained. Some 1,600 university academic deans have been relieved of their positions.

Turkey is very important to our country’s interest in that region of the world. We can ill-afford to lose them as an ally in the fights against terror. Turkey is part of the NATO alliance. But, we cannot allow those interests to blind us to the abuse of civil liberties happening in Turkey.

Join me in asking President Barack Obama, Secretary of State John Kerry, Sens. Lindsey Graham and  Tim Scott to tread lightly but to delve deeply before allowing extraditions and in reacting to further re-calls of those Turkish citizens in the US.

The Rev. Chris Heavner is campus pastor for the Lutheran Campus Ministry at Clemson.

Source: Greenville Online , August 5, 2016


Related News

Journalists seek asylum in Canada amid Turkish crackdown

Duncan Pike of the Toronto-based Canadian Journalists for Free Expression said the decline of press freedom in Turkey has been a growing concern as the Tayyip Erdogan regime continues to use the coup as a pretext to crack down on opposition critical of his government. “Reporters are stripped of press credentials. Publishing houses are closed down. Authors, journalists, teachers and academics are detained and investigated,” said Pike.

Turkish Twitter war over education

Plans to abolish “prep schools” in Turkey have sparked a huge feud between two of the country’s most powerful forces on the micro-blogging website Twitter. Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his AK party have proposed eliminating the schools, which provide private tuition classes to help high school children prepare for university entrance exams. […]

PM Erdoğan: Internet bill protesters are defenders of immorality

Media outlets ran stories based on leaked voice recordings and the documents of a second probe, which has been stalled since Dec. 25, 2014, when the government started removing or reassigning thousands of police officers and police chiefs as well as the prosecutors carrying out the investigation. The press has since reported that the depths of corruption within the government is actually a lot bigger than initially assumed.

Government media runs riot in smear campaign against Hizmet

A news article in Daily Sabah, the new, English-language member of the government’s media lineup, claimed on Monday that the police are ratcheting up measures to patch holes in their security network in order to prevent leaks by Gülenists, a derogatory term used to describe the Hizmet movement.

Terrorist organization, you say

He is 73 years old and is known as a respected scholar who has been studying Islamic exegesis. He is well-known in academia. He was promoted to associate professor in the field of Islamic exegesis back in 1977. He served as head of the exegesis department at the faculty of theology at Erzurum’s Atatürk University, conducted research in Paris Sorbonne, taught at the faculty of Islamic studies at the Islamic University of Madinah, was the chair of exegesis studies at Marmara University and conducted academic studies at International Islamic University of Malaysia. He is the author of 13 books and hundreds of articles.

Trump’s Top Military Adviser Is Lobbying For Obscure Company With Ties To Turkish Government

An intelligence consulting firm founded by retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, Donald Trump’s top military adviser, was recently hired as a lobbyist by an obscure Dutch company with ties to Turkey’s government and its president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

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

İstanbul hosts dialogue leaders to discuss tolerance in education

Istanbul police display hundreds of books among evidence of ‘terror’

‘State of rule of law suspended in Turkey, if not completely eliminated’

Political predictions for 2014

Turkish scholar Fethullah Gulen receives Manhae Peace Prize

Fethullah Gulen on ‘GPS’: Failed Turkey coup looked ‘like a Hollywood movie’

Turkish schools in Romania celebrate 20th year

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News