Turkey’s Erdogan and ISIS’ new breeding ground

Ismail Yakob: Turkey’s President Recep Erdogan appears to be having a double dealings on taking the fight to  ISIS. He has instead prefer a cosmetic approach in tackling the terrorist group.
Ismail Yakob: Turkey’s President Recep Erdogan appears to be having a double dealings on taking the fight to ISIS. He has instead prefer a cosmetic approach in tackling the terrorist group.


Date posted: January 30, 2017

Ismail Yakob

IT is no longer news that, for some time now, the radical terrorist group, the Islamic State, also known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS),  has been terrorizing several parts of the world. The group, which still control swathes of areas in Syria and Iraq where it originated from, has been spreading its signature violence and religious radicalism  across international boarders even as far as Nigeria, where a faction of Boko Haram terrorists has pledged its allegiance to the  dreaded  self-acclaimed jihad group.

Today, elements of ISIS and its affiliates are  said to be commanding presence in no little ways in many countries, including Turkey. Turkey has been one of the major victims of ISIS attacks. The country has been hit severally by suicide bombers and blood-thirsty ISIS members, resulting in the death of hundreds of Turks and wanton destruction of property.  The regular influx of refugees into the country from its southern  neighbours,  Iraq  and Syria. as a result of the group activities has also taken a massive toll on Turkey.


Turkey’s President Recep Erdogan appears to be having a double dealings on taking the fight to  ISIS. He has instead prefer a cosmetic approach in tackling the terrorist group. It is high time Erdogan purged himself of insincerity and religious rhetoric in the fight against ISIS and joined forces with other leaders to bring enduring peace to Turkey, the Middle-East and the various parts of the world.


However, like a Janus, the Roman  god that is usually depicted as having two faces, Turkey’s President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, appears to be having a double dealings on taking the fight to  ISIS. He  has instead prefer a cosmetic approach in tackling the terrorist group. Erdogan had once closed Incirlik Air Base  that was being used by United States to launch attacks against the Islamic State,  thereby grounding flights and cutting off power.

Apart from allowing  Islamic State fighters to regularly have a free passage through Turkey’s porous borders, while at the same time claiming to be raining torrents of bombs on ISIS, Erdogan’s subtle support for the group manifested in faraway Albania few days ago where a teacher working at a Turkish government-funded religious school conversed with a student about how the ISIS militants sought to protect Islam and “provide protection to the Muslim people of Syria, Palestine, and Egypt.”


Many believe that the Turkish president can go to any length to stir up support for dreaded groups, even in other countries, to achieve his major political goal of silencing opponents and be a major entrepreneur of dictatorial rule.


The teacher, in the Erdogan and his ruling AK Party sponsored school, was shown by the private television station TVKlan debating with students and making “strong statements in favour of the notorious ISIS organisation and the former leader of the terrorist organisation al-Qaida, Bin Laden,” said the statement from the Albanian police anti-terror department.

It is highly disturbing that a school being financed by the Turkish government is now trying to brainwash innocent children to believe on the evil-laced agenda of ISIS. Scores of Albanians are believed to have joined ISIS in the past few years, and only God knows if some teachers in the school in question do not play any role in breeding new members and sympathisers for ISIS. About two-thirds of Albania’s 3 million people are Muslims. Though mainstream religious leaders have always urged believers not to join the terrorist organisation .

But many are not too surprised that a school being sponsored by Erdogan is in the eyes of the storm regarding support for Islamic radicalism. The Turkish president has a penchant for using religion as a tool to achieve his obsession for authoritarian power. Since his assumption of power in 2003, Erdoğan  has continued to use Islam to justify his increasingly despotic rule, and to appeal to his conservative base on the need to crack down on opposing views. With his successful bid for president in 2014, he began to use his position, shaped by a unique form of nationalistic and patriarchal Islamism, to oppress other ethnic and religious groups.

Many believe that the Turkish president can go to any length to stir up support for dreaded groups, even in other countries, to achieve his major political goal of silencing opponents and be a major entrepreneur of dictatorial rule. Turkey’s Kurdish community (around 18 per cent of Turkey’s population) and members of the Gülen Movement, inspired by the United States based Turkish cleric, Fethullah Gulen, appear to be a major target of Erdogan. The Turkish president accused the Gulen Movement for the July 15, 2016 aborted coup that seek to topple his government even as the highly respected Gulen has denied any involvement.


The Turkish president has a penchant for using religion as a tool to achieve his obsession for authoritarian power. Since his assumption of power in 2003, Erdoğan  has continued to use Islam to justify his increasingly despotic rule, and to appeal to his conservative base on the need to crack down on opposing views.


While ISIS has not failed to claim responsibility for some of the major attacks in Turkey, and  keeps waging vicious attacks from few kilometres away from Turkey’s soil, Erdogan is either more concerned with linking some  of the violence to Gulen movement or spending  the state’s military resources battling Turkish and Syrian Kurds, even though Syrian Kurds are backed by the United States, which supports them precisely because they are fighting the Islamic State.

It is high time Erdogan purged himself of insincerity and religious rhetoric in the fight against ISIS and joined forces with other leaders to bring enduring peace to Turkey, the Middle-East and the various parts of the world.


Yakob, a public affair analyst, writes in from Minna, Niger State.

Source: Nigeria Tribune , January 30, 2017


Related News

In Greece, Turks tell of lives full of fear in Recep Erdogan’s Turkey

Dominika Spyratou of the Greek NGO SolidarityNow, which provides assistance to refugees, says that more than 1,000 Turkish citizens came to Greece seeking asylum after the July 2016 failed coup, while almost 300 Turkish families are now in Thessaloniki.

Newly launched book tells stories of purge victims after Turkey’s July 15 coup

A recently published book tells the stories of people who, following a military coup attempt in Turkey on July 15, 2016, were victims of a government-led crackdown carried out under the pretext of an anti-coup fight.

The consequences of tyranny never change

Certain groups devised an imaginary and ambiguous crime against the Hizmet movement based on claims of a so-called “parallel state.” However, this is such a vague crime that if those who blame the Hizmet movement for establishing a “parallel state” are accused of the same thing, these charges will seem well-founded, because of ambiguity of the claims.

Erdoğan says personally pursuing fight against ‘parallel structure’

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan acknowledged during a speech on Tuesday that he has personally been pursuing a “fight” against the so-called “parallel structure,” adding that his administration is ready to cooperate with district governors to “clear” its members from state bureaucracy.

Benin seeks development with investments of Turkish enterprises

In an exclusive interview with Today’s Zaman, Benin’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Nassirou Bako-Arifari said the purpose of his recent visit to Turkey was to strengthen cooperation between the countries and to seek the benefits of the wide expansion of investments of Turkish enterprises. Highlighting the fact that Turkish businesses have global operations and develop […]

In rare interview: Fethullah Gulen rebukes Turkish regime

“The master” suggested that democracy is the best option for societies characterized by diversity and heterogeneity clarifying that those features apply to both Egypt and Turkey as they house many segments of Muslims and Christians as well as atheists. Hence, Gulen proposes that the administration system must be tolerant to not create hostilities, which have become common in Turkey.

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

Group of activists walking across Europe raises 40,000 euros for Turkish refugees in Greece

Interview with Gulen in Kenya’s Daily Nation

Coup d’état attempt: Turkey’s Reichstag fire?

Erdogan’s Turkey silencing dissent, abusing terrorism charges – HRW report

AK Party Deputy Hakan Şükür resigns due to hostile moves against Hizmet movement

AKP turns medical university into its headquarters

Turkey: Time the world intervened

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News