GYV Declaration: The AKP and Hizmet on democracy

İhsan Yılmaz
İhsan Yılmaz


Date posted: December 6, 2013

Ihsan Yilmaz

The Hizmet movement’s Journalists and Writers Foundation (GYV) released a statement on its website on Thursday in which it said it is worried about the profiling of citizens, civic groups and public employees. It demanded that all the legislation that is reminiscent of the old, anti-democratic Turkey must be revised to ensure their full compliance with fundamental rights and freedoms.

The GYV reiterated that the Hizmet movement relies on such fundamental principles as rule of law, democracy, pluralism, universal human rights and freedoms, justice, equal citizenship, compliance with international law and conventions, transparency of the state and accountability.

The GYV also criticized the AKP’s plan to force prep schools to shut down, saying the plan is in breach of the universal principles and norms of law, particularly including the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and the Turkish Constitution, as well as of fundamental human rights and democratic values. The statement described the government’s attempt as a “social engineering effort that is unacceptable.” The GYV also dismissed suggestions that protests against the prep school ban are anti-democratic: “To portray the civilian/democratic reactions to the plan to ban prep schools as well as to anti-democratic moves as part of a political conspiracy is to wander off the main issue and distort reality.” The GYV once again rejected claims of the Hizmet movement forming a political party. But the GYV reiterated that the people who are inspired by the Hizmet movement are free to lend support to any political party and/or candidates based on their personal choices. The statement underlined that the Hizmet movement is supported by volunteers with a diverse array of political and ideological backgrounds and thus it is impossible for Hizmet to encourage its members to lend support to any specific political party or candidate. The GYV concluded that “the Hizmet movement nurtures a heartfelt desire for Turkey’s being endowed with true democracy, transparency, full-fledged rule of law and shows due respect to the nation’s democratic preferences and to Parliament.”

I have cited and quoted the GYV declaration to show that as a result of the daily political tensions in Turkey, the Hizmet movement has been reaffirming its stance on democracy, pluralism, human rights, international values, freedom of expression, importance of elections and free choice, the vitality of the EU and the ECHR for Turkey and so on. Moreover, with every new development or crisis, the movement has been fine-tuning and refining its stance on these issues in a progressive fashion. These statements of the GYV have also been playing a pedagogical, as it were, role on the minds of the Hizmet volunteers. With each undemocratic mistake of the AKP, they are appreciating the importance of democracy, a small, transparent, accountable state with proper and effective checks and balances on the executive and a robust regime of rule of law, accompanied by objective, human rights friendly, independent judiciary. The Hizmet volunteers have become increasingly aware that having practicing Muslims in power is not enough. What is crucial is to have a modern democracy with a proper separation of powers, powerful parliamentarians who are responsible to their voters not to their leaders, rule of law, transparency, accountability, credible opposition and just elections laws. The Turkish practicing Muslims, chiefly among them the Hizmet volunteers, are painfully discovering that these secular values and principles are not against Islam and they are indeed “Islamic” requirements. Out of necessity, Hizmet has been engaged in “ijtihad by conduct” on these issues. Muslim jurisprudence and history do not provide concrete and detailed blueprints for all these, other than some universal generic guidelines such as being just and consulting people.

All in all, the AKP’s Kemalo-Islamist members’ recently visible problems with the Hizmet movement may well serve the further deepening of Civil Islam understanding of democracy, human rights, independent and diverse civil society, rule of law, accountability of the state and checks and balances.

Source: Today's Zaman , December 6, 2013


Related News

Pro-Erdogan gang leader says will hang all Gülenists

Sedat Peker, a convicted gang leader and staunch supporter of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, said they will hang all people linked to the Gülen movement from flagpoles and trees, the Diken news website reported on Sunday.

James Baker’s remarks about Fethullah Gulen and Gulen Movement

Honorary James Baker said: Problems of the world would be easy to address if, on the global level, we develop ways of sharing respect for each other’s religious perspectives. It is in this manner, the Gülen Institute and those who promote shared vision of interfaith dialogue provide truly invaluable leadership.

Individuals can force change

Instead of Erdoğan’s accusations that the Hizmet movement had plotted to unseat his government, couldn’t it have been a handful of good men and women within the bureaucracy, i.e., the judiciary and the police, who leaked the investigation documents on Dec. 17 to the public to prevent these crimes from being covered up?

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.

Recent poll on Hizmet movement

DR. DOĞU ERGİL, April 24, 2012 The MetroPOLL Strategic and Social Research Center conducted a nationwide survey during the last week of March and the first week of April. The topics polled included the clash between the Gülen community and the National Intelligence Organization (MİT). The number of respondents who believe the Gülen community wants to […]

Parents criticize gov’t-led police raids on educational institutions

A number of parents staged a protest on Friday against raids police carried out by the police on Thursday as part of a government-led operation against 26 private schools and educational institutions in Kahramanmaraş province that are inspired by the Gülen movement, a faith-based civil society movement inspired by Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen.

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

Fethullah Gülen backs peace talks between government and PKK

Ugandan FA Minister: Turkish schools paved the way for Turkey to reach out to Africa

What is going on in Turkey? Who is Fethullah Gülen?

Escape from Turkey’s parallel reality

UK Parliament: No evidence that Gülen, movement behind coup attempt

Yet another conspiracy against the Gülen movement?

Gülen Movement’s role on London conference agenda

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News