Pak-Turk Schools: A fate undecided


Date posted: April 17, 2017

Waqar Gillani

The PakTurk International School and College system continues to struggle against pressure from the Turkish and Pakistani governments.

Last July, Turkey witnessed an attempted coup followed by a strong and persistent campaign by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to crush its opponents — Islamic scholar Fethullah Gulen and his movement — allegedly involved in this coup-attempt inside and outside Turkey.

The PakTurk school system is also one of Erdogan’s targets, despite the fact that its management has repeatedly denied links to the movement or the coup-attempt.

Since the attempted coup, the Turkish staff members of the schools have either not been able to have their Pakistani visas renewed or have found them to be cancelled. It appears that the Pakistani government is on a covert mission to oust these teachers, even though they have been serving in Pakistan for years. The plan is, reportedly, to handover these schools to a Turkish government-backed non-government organisation by the name of Turkiye Maarif Foundation (TMF).


“We cannot comprehend why PakTurk educational institutions — which do not have any financial or administrative contribution from the governments of Pakistan and Turkey — are being threatened with closure or transfer to an entity backed by the Turkish government and facilitated by the Pakistan government,” said a PakTurk Educational Foundation official.


Pakistan is not the only country where the Turkish government has demanded the closure or transfer of PakTurk schools. The same demand has been extended to several other countries. Reportedly, these countries, including Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Afghanistan, Tanzania, Mozambique, Malawi, some European countries and the US, have rejected the proposals of the Turkish government to let TMF take over the educational institutions.

In Pakistan, the PakTurk schools’ management is resisting all tactics of the Pakistani government. When the Punjab government pressured the management to resign and handover seven schools in Punjab to TMF, the school management moved the Islamabad High Court (IHC).

Separately, some Turkish staff has left Pakistan, while more than 100 teachers and their families have sought refugee status from the United Nations, since their visas have been cancelled and they fear to be deported to Turkey where they could be jailed.

In one case, the IHC has issued notices to the Punjab Inspector General of Police and senior officials of the Counter Terrorism Department (CTD) on a petition filed by the chairman of the PakTurk Educational Foundation (PTEF) Alamgir Khan. The petition states that government officials were harassing Khan in direct violation of court orders. The allegation is that CTD officials have threatened Khan with dire consequences if he does not resign and that they have initiated an inquiry into PTEF’s affairs to coerce him.


Some Turkish staff has left Pakistan, while more than 100 teachers and their families have sought refugee status from the United Nations, since their visas have been cancelled and they fear to be deported to Turkey.


“We cannot comprehend why PakTurk educational institutions — which do not have any financial or administrative contribution from the governments of Pakistan and Turkey — are being threatened with closure or transfer to an entity backed by the Turkish government and facilitated by the Pakistan government,” said a PTEF official.

The IHC has declared that Khan should not be summoned to the CTD office in Rawalpindi or Lahore, he should not be harassed and he cannot be arrested without permission from the court.

On March 15, in another court case on this issue, one in which TMF wanted to become a party in the petition to hand over the schools, the IHC ordered that no private enterprise could be confiscated by the state. The high court rejected the petition filed by TMF and directed that the schools would be administered by the existing board of governors.

According to a PTEF official, the Interior Ministry has informed TMF through a letter in November 2016 that its application for being registered as an International NGO (INGO) has been approved. The ministry directed the INGO to further submit all required documents within two days. The letter was dispatched during Erdogan’s visit to Pakistan on November 16-17, 2016. At the same time, Islamabad also ordered 108 Turkish teachers and management staff to leave Pakistan within 72 hours.


In the last two decades, PakTurk Schools in Pakistan have brought pride and distinction to Pakistan by winning over 260 medals. Its students participated in education and science competitions in 97 countries, and topped the federal and provincial boards as well as Cambridge International Boards of Examinations.


The PTEF management has demanded the Pakistani government allow TMF to establish its own schools if it desires to contribute to education in Pakistan. “However, using coercive strategies and the government’s influence to ask for the forced transfer of PakTurk educational institutions is not only devoid of goodwill but also a blatant violation of laws,” the PTEF official observed.

In Turkey, reportedly, TMF is not considered as an INGO, with no experience in running schools and imparting education. There is also criticism in Turkey that why did Turkey accept to finance TMF with Saudi-money through the Islamic Development Bank?

AH Nayyer, academic, researcher and former professor of Quaid e Azam University, Islamabad, believes that Pakistan could have conducted its own independent enquiry to evaluate the Turkish government’s allegations against the PakTurk schools. He says these schools have been serving here for many years and no one has had any complaint against them. “Damaging reputed educational institutions in our own country just to please the Turkish regime is not an intelligent move,” he said.

Recently, Sartaj Aziz, advisor to Pakistani prime minister on foreign affairs, said the government was following the PakTurk schools issue and trying to meet Turkish demands.

Pakistani parents and students of the PakTurk schools have repeatedly protested against the measures of the Pakistani government and called for non-intervention in the educational institutions and restoration of the Turkish teachers’ visas.

PakTurk International Schools and Colleges began its services in Pakistan in 1995, with its first branch in Islamabad. The schools were initially meant to educate Afghan refugees. With the passage of time, they became a successful venture. Currently, the PTEF has 26 schools across Pakistan. They teach nearly 11,000 students, employ 1,500 teachers and have more than 100 Turkish staff. The foundation has been delivering education from preschool to grade 12 according to Pakistani law and curriculum for the last 21 years.

In the last two decades, PakTurk Schools in Pakistan have brought pride and distinction to Pakistan by winning over 260 medals. Its students participated in education and science competitions in 97 countries, and topped the federal and provincial boards as well as Cambridge International Boards of Examinations.

Only four out of 176 countries where international Turkish schools are located gave a positive response to Turkey’s demand.

Source: The News On Sunday , April 16, 2017


Related News

Hizmet movement and military coups

İHSAN YILMAZ, Wednesday April 18, 2012 With the democratization of Turkey and the new mentality of the judiciary it has created, prosecutors can now tackle past coup attempts and successful coups, the most recent being the Feb. 28, 1997 coup process. I call it a “process” since the toppling of former Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan’s […]

8 detained in police raids on İzmir schools as Erdoğan’s witch hunt continues

Eight people were detained on charges of forging documents in police raids on 30 private schools established by volunteers from the faith-based Gülen movement early on Tuesday in İzmir, as part of a Justice and Development Party (AAK Party government-orchestrated operation targeting the movement.

Two additional Turkish schools to open in Casablanca

Two additional Turkish schools, one of which will provide education in English in Morocco for the very first time, will be set up in Casablanca, Morocco Turkish Schools General Director İbrahim Aktaş announced on Tuesday. The first Turkish school on the African continent was opened in Morocco in the city of Tangiers in 1994. Other schools were subsequently opened in 52 African countries.

Turkish PM calls for boycott of Gülen movement’s schools

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has geared up his rhetoric against the movement of U.S. based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, calling for a boycott of the movement’s schools.

Warriors of enlightenment: pen versus bullet

BÜLENT KENEŞ, April 24, 2012 As we were watching the country finals of International Turkish Olympiads enthusiastically and becoming impatient for the great final in Turkey, we were shocked to learn that a heinous attack had been launched against one of the educational institutions that, like their counterparts in the remotest parts of the world, […]

Kimse Yok Mu conducts 500 cataract surgeries in Pakistan

Humanitarian aid organization Kimse Yok Mu? (Is Anybody There?) carried out 500 cataract surgeries in Pakistan, as part of its international campaigns to reach out economically disadvantaged people. Volunteers from the organization arrived in the city of Dera Ismail Khan in July for its campaign to perform cataract surgeries for 5,000 people in the country. So far, around 500 people have undergone surgeries, which bolstered ties between Turkey and Pakistan.

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

Deporting Gülen would undercut NATO

Education for Sustainable Development

A Very Predictable Coup?

285 Turkish teachers and families risk forcible deportation and persecution in Pakistan

Swiss investigate spying on Turkish community

Hizmet and current political debates in Turkey

Is the March 30 referendum in danger?

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News