Erdogan’s hunt for Gülenists, at home and abroad, includes abductions, torture and disappearances


Date posted: December 21, 2018

Turkey’s crackdown has targeted ordinary citizens, suspected of links with Gülen’s Islamic movement. The country’s secret services have seized people in broad daylight, at home and abroad. Violence is used to extort confessions and denunciations. A victim speaks out.

Istanbul (AsiaNews) – Since the night of the failed coup in July 2016, which left President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s power in the balance, Turkish authorities have engaged in a witch hunt that has touched hundreds of thousands of soldiers, judges, teachers and intellectuals, as well as ordinary people.

Plainclothes security agents have pushed defenseless citizens into mini-vans in broad daylight, or gone after people who left Turkey long ago seeking a new life. All of them linked by the same thing, namely a real or presumed affiliation with Turkish Islamic preacher Fethullah Gülen, who now lives in exile in Pennsylvania (United States).

Erdogan, Turkey’s modern sultan, and the preacher were once allies. Their disagreements, conflicting visions, and different sensibilities about the role of Islam began long before the coup. The night of the attempted military uprising, a night still shrouded in mystery, was thus the last stage in a gradual falling out between two men with different views about politics and religion in Turkey.

A group of international journalists from nine different media outlets, including French daily Le Monde, looked into Turkey’s purges and released a scathing report full of dates, events, witnesses and personal stories that highlight the tragedy that is still unfolding in the eastern Mediterranean, at the gates of Europe, in a land that joins East and West.

Turkey’s secret services are the iron fist of the crackdown. Since the attempted coup d’état, they set up a parallel “system” where they arbitrarily detain and torture Gülen’s followers in secret prisons and torture cells.

Unprepared to follow the rules of evidence and habeas corpus, the authorities have opted for repression, abductions, intimidation and diplomatic pressure.

After the coup, which left 250 people dead and 1,500 wounded, almost 220,000 people have been detained, with more than 50,000 convicted.

Universities, schools, and associations affiliated, or simply suspected of links with Erdogan’s former ally and his movement, were shut down. Businesses worth some US$ 15 billion were seized by the authorities.

The series of abductions by Turkey resembles the policy of “extraordinary renditions” carried out by the United States under George W Bush after 9/11. A network parallel to official institutions is responsible for the abductions, torture and abuse, all designed to extract confessions.

All this can be found in Correctiv, a Germany-based non-profit newsroom. In its blacksitesturkey report, it presents the cases of some 20 people caught in the web of Turkey’s intelligence services. Two of them agreed to speak out. Their identity and country of refuge have been kept secret.

One of them is Tolga, who was abducted in an Ankara street last year and was held for 92 days (which he counted by placing small paper balls in the cracks of the walls of his cell every time he got the first of his two paltry meals).

In this three-month period, he lost 21 kilos and endured beatings, electric shocks, sleep deprivation and sexual abuse. He remembers with surgical precision the protocols used “in the archipelago” of torture, perpetrated by “professionals” linked “to the State”.

“I realised after a few weeks that they were looking for anonymous witnesses for the trial. They have so much evidence to collect and so many accused that they have nothing” in terms of proof, he said.

In Turkey’s justice system, charges can be based on anonymous witnesses. “In their head, they had a fictional terrorist organisation and needed people to fill its roles.”

During his captivity, his family tried to find him to no avail. Relatives, activists and lawyers campaigned online asking for help from the international community, also to no avail.

Despite claims by Turkey that it has a zero-tolerance policy on torture, the opposite is true according to Tolga, who is now a refugee in a hotel in a Western nation. His cell remains imprinted in his memory: one by two metres with padded walls to prevent prisoners from killing themselves by smashing their heads.

Suddenly one day he was released on a street in the capital; in the following months, he hid from the world, and took advantage of the first opportunity to flee the country.

The international team of journalists heard other stories like Tolga’s and Ali’s, people who fled the country to escape Erdogan’s purges. On the day of his release Tolga was given a water bottle, which he held onto because he realised it had the fingerprints of one of his jailers.

Before he left Turkey, he stayed in a safe house hoping that “one day the bottle might be useful in a trial” against Turkey’s leaders and the torturers responsible for crimes against humanity.


Source: AsiaNews.it , December 20, 2018


Related News

Central bank data disprove interior minister’s rigging claims

Ala’s remarks were widely interpreted as a reference to Bank Asya, a participation bank affiliated with the Hizmet movement, which the government has tried to scapegoat through conspiracy theories to evade corruption allegations. Some news stories broke soon after Ala’s claims, reporting that Bank Asya’s accounts were being scrutinized for misconduct.

What lies beneath the prep-school row between AK Party and the Hizmet

It is an open secret that Erdoğan is not targeting the prep schools, but the Hizmet movement that is inspired by the Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen. People and companies that are sympathetic to the movement operate the majority of Turkey’s prep schools. Like the rest of the educational institutions affiliated with the movement, they are the most academically successful, sending students with outstanding scores to the best schools each year.

Students from 70 countries share joy of graduating in İstanbul ceremony

Foreign students who have come to study in Turkey threw their caps into the air in celebration at a graduation ceremony held in Istanbul on Wednesday.

Alevis and Sunnis to Search for Peace and a Future Together at Abant Meeting

Upcoming 30th meeting of the Abant Platform will search for a peaceful common future for Alevis and Sunnis who have been living peacefully together in Anatolia despite external provocations and some unwanted interruptions. The coexistence in the past promises hope for future. The meeting is themed as “Alevis and Sunnis: Searching for Peace and a Future Together,” which will be attended by intellectuals who will also be part of the solution.

What are the golden kids of the Turkish Olympiads doing now?

SELAHATTİN SEVİ/MÜHENNA KAHVECİ/MEHMET ALİ POYRAZ, KYRGZSTAN/GEORGIA/ROMANIA/KENYA/BANGLADESH  Late summer heralds the arrival of Turkish language season in Anatolia. Teachers and students from all over the world pour into Turkey, each of them presenting their talents and skills onstage. Children of various backgrounds and nationalities recount fables, recite poems and sing songs across various parts of Turkey. Ahead […]

Representatives of Abrahamic religions meet in Iftar in Antioch

Antioch Intercultural Dialog Association (AKADIM) and Kimse Yok Mu relief organization brought together representatives of three Abrahamic religions in a fast breaking event in Hatay (Antioch). The representatives gave messages of peace and brotherhood. Mayor Assoc. Prof. Lütfü Savaş noted in his talk that unless someone from outside comes and asks, in Antioch they do not know who is Muslim and who is Christian, “We are all tolerant to each other.

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

Taliban Shuts Down Turkish Schools in Afghanistan

Kimse Yok Mu cheers up Panamanian Orphans

Row between Turkish government and Gulen Movement takes new twist

Reporters Without Borders urges Turkey to rescind draconian state of emergency decrees

Turkey’s ‘terrorists’ active in India. But who are they really?

Can a Post-Coup Turkey Get Along with Europe?

Erdogan Delivers Ultimatum: Washington Has to Choose Between Gulen and Turkey

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News