Erdogan regime’s defamation of Hizmet at full throttle – UK-based academic denies recent allegations


Date posted: October 28, 2016

In a written statement released both in Turkish and English, UK-based academic Özcan Keleş denied recent allegations about him that appeared in Turkey’s mostly pro-government media outlets, saying that only his name, his father’s name, his hometown and the fact that Aksaray is a city in Turkey were accurate in the articles.

“Everything else is untrue,” Keleş says.

Keleş has been chairperson of the London-based Dialogue Society since 2008 and is a non-practicing barrister as well as a full-time Ph.D. candidate in the sociology of human rights at the University of Sussex.

What follows is his full press statement published on his personal blog on Tuesday.

On Saturday, October 21, 2016, twenty anti-terror police accompanied by a news crew raided a block of five flats in Aksaray, Turkey, that belongs to my father, Ömer Keleş.

Within an hour, the story featured in no fewer than thirty media outlets, across Turkey. Doğan Media (DHA) and Ihlas News Agency supplied the story to the Turkish press. DHA and Hürriyet ran the story as “Police operation against villa of Fethullah Gülen’s right-hand man”. Hürriyet’s story says that I, Özcan Keleş, am Gülen’s right-hand man; that I was spotted in footage taken a day after the coup in Pennsylvania tending to Gülen’s medical needs; that I live in the US; that my father is the movement’s UK leader (“imam”); that there is an arrest warrant for my father and me in Turkey; that I have a three-storey villa in Aksaray; that the villa was empty when raided and that the police discovered many empty safes including hidden ones in the walls and floors on every floor of the villa; that a firearm was recovered from the villa; and that the villa’s CCTV cameras and “advanced” alarm system were particularly telling. Hürriyet ran this story and the headline without using qualifications such as “alleged”, “so-called” or quotation marks. 

Show Haber (popular TV station) featured the story on its evening news, superimposing images of my father and me on footage of the police raid, describing the villa as “mysterious” and saying that the raid had discovered “secret artefacts, sections and secrets”; that I never left the side of Gülen; and that I lived in the US for years. Other variations were added to the story by other media outlets. For example, Akşam ran the story as “Gülen’s right-hand man ran away with the cash”. Haberbedava said that I made my first appearance before a camera when I was spotted tending to Gülen a day after the coup; that the mystery around my identity continues; and that my attempt to discredit Turkey to foreign media through my critical English tweets is telling. Haber10’s headline read that I am the right-hand man of the “terrorist leader.” Hakikat Perver says that Gülen’s money safe “exploded”, in reference to the safes and me. All of the stories emphasise the name of my alleged villa (“Nur Konağı” in Turkish, “House of Light” in English) as further “proof” of the “villa’s” connection to me.

What is true is that (1) my name is Özcan Keleş, (2) that Ömer Keleş is my father, (3) that my family originates from Aksaray, and (4) that Aksaray is a city in Turkey. Everything else is untrue. I am not Gülen’s right-hand man. I am not influential in Hizmet. I have never lived in the US; the last time I visited was in 2014. I was at home in London on the night of and days following the coup so I was not the person shown with his back to the camera; I did not make my first appearance before the cameras next to Gülen; I have a YouTube channel and have appeared on TV and podcasts since 2008; I am not a “mysterious unknown”; I’m active on social media, volunteer my personal affiliation and identity; am well-known in many groups and circles, including the Turkish-speaking community in London, and have my own weblog. I have a number of law degrees and qualifications and am a Barrister currently studying for a PhD in human rights.

I have never owned property in Turkey. The building that was raided is not a villa but a block of five flats; it was not empty but had occupants. It does not belong to me, but my father. My father built it for his ageing parents and in-laws, my grandparents. It is a three-storey building of five apartments; one each for the grandparents on both sides, one for their carers, one for my parents and one for guests. My parents moved my grandparents into their new homes some twenty years ago with carers to live with them and to tend to their needs, while my parents were in the UK. When my parents went to Turkey, they lived there and looked after my grandparents. The last time I was there was in 2013 when I went to visit my sick grandfather, who passed away shortly after I left. Today I have one surviving grandparent, who was being looked after at that building that was raided. The name of the block (House of Nur) is a reference to the fact that in Islam the elderly are considered to emanate “nur” which means light.

As for the safes and other allegations. My father had a safe installed for each of the five apartments and an extra one for his apartment. My grandparents kept their valuables there. The safes were empty because three of the four occupants of the apartments had passed away. Had they been alive, the police would have discovered their pocket money and valuables. My father was the legal owner of a licensed firearm. It is not uncommon for wealthy people in Turkey to keep one as a deterrent in their home. The house is not mysterious and does not have any secret rooms. In fact, the house has hosted many AK Party supporters and government officials.

My father is not the Hizmet movement’s UK “imam”; he is not even a “Hizmet sympathiser”; he has not attended a Hizmet fundraising dinner or sohbet for at least five years. He has always been critical of Hizmet. He is very well known within the North London Turkish-speaking community and many, including AK Party members, can attest to his affiliations and his views. His closest group of friends are all AK Party supporters and many have official roles with the UK branch of UETD, an AK Party-supporting group. He has consistently voted for the AK Party, even after it turned on Hizmet. In the past, as one who supports worthy causes regardless of the group behind it, my father has donated to Aziziye, Suleymani, Diyanet and Mevlana mosques in London and other Diyanet mosques and maasjids in Turkey. His most recent project was donating to and personally working on the construction of the Diyanet mosque in Hornsey.

My father and family are being unjustly targeted because I have written and spoken on Hizmet and Turkey.”

Source: Turkey Purge , October 25, 2016


Related News

Defamation – Turkey’s Justice Minister: Gülen Followers Take Christian Names To Infiltrate Western States

Turkey’s Justice Minister Bekir Bozdağ said on Monday that followers of Gülen movement, change their Turkish names in order to infiltrate into the institutions of the Western states.

Aid organization head blasts terror probe

Turkey was shocked by a terror investigation against Kimse Yok Mu (KYM). According to a statement by the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office, the organization was being probed over its alleged involvement in terrorism during activities during Eid al-Adha.

Indonesia and Turkey: Similar but Different

On the other side, there is one very important thing that Indonesia must avoid. The Turkish government has been inching ever closer to becoming an Islamist nation, abandoning its secularity that has acted as the foundation of modern Turkey until now. The government’s power is also getting increasingly concentrated in the hands of the Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

Erdoğan is helping Hizmet community in three ways

If President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan had given an assurance to the world, saying, “The Hizmet movement never resorts to violence and it is an antidote to Islamist violence,” people would still have nurtured doubts and they still would have asked if they, like Islamists, would resort to violence under duress.

CSOs slam smear campaign against Hizmet, call on PM to stop hate speech

A large-scale dark propaganda campaign has been conducted by some circles close to the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government against the Hizmet movement and Gülen, particularly since a corruption scandal erupted in December of 2013 in which three Cabinet ministers’ sons, many state bureaucrats and also well-known businessmen were implicated.

Egypt’s Turkish schools reject Akşam and A Haber TV reports

The administration of the Turkish Salahaldin International Schools based in Egypt has sent a correction to the Akşam daily and A Haber TV station, stating that two recent reports about Turkish schools in Egypt appearing in the pro-government media outlets were baseless and false.

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

[Hizmet’s] Prep schools and civilized debate

Davud Hanci’s wife says Calgary imam detained in Turkey ‘a very peaceful man’

Turkey’s tryst with democracy (1)

Decision to build road on school grounds nonsensical, say parents

Gülen speaks to Kurdish paper, renews his support for education in mother tongue

Fethullah Gulen Criticizes the Da Vinci Code

60-year-old Turkish villager detained after questioning gov’t coup narrative

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News