Dangerous and unnecessary tension

Markar ESAYAN
Markar ESAYAN


Date posted: December 4, 2013

MARKAR ESAYAN

Turkey has been experiencing heated tension over the prep school issue for a while.

And unfortunately, the discussion was taken out of the educational context and has become a political issue. The Taraf daily, in its recent reports and with the official documents it published, argued that the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government had decided in a 2004 National Security Council (MGK) meeting to eliminate the Fethullah Gülen movement and that it had actually implemented this decision.

Some leading columnists, including Mümtazer Türköne from the Zaman daily and Gülay Göktürk from the Bugün daily, who have attracted the attention and the appreciation of the public thanks to their courage, commented on these reports, saying, “These insult people’s intelligence and memories.” I completely agree with them.

In its subsequent reports, the daily further argued that this operation held jointly by the government and the military against the Gülen movement has been carried out without interruptions since 2004. This means that the military was cooperating with the government to eliminate the Gülen movement at a time when it was also devising plans to overthrow the AK Party government, implementing plans to foment chaos including the Hrant Dink murder and the murder of missionaries in Malatya, issuing a warning to the government, promoting a dissolution case against the AK Party and had plans to assassinate Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, President Abdullah Gül and Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç. This is the argument they want us to believe.

“The anti-AK Party and Gülen plan,” drafted by Col. Dursun Çiçek at the General Staff in 2009, was devised because of allegations that after the AK Party came into power, it facilitated religious activities and supported the Gülen movement and other Islamist groups. The pro-coup military servicemen saw the Gülen movement and its political supporter, the AK Party, as leading threats.

Obviously, the military has not received any assistance from the government to implement the decisions taken at the MGK in 2004. In addition, they also found that the movement had become stronger over this period. The plans sought to present the Gülen movement as a terrorist organization and offered measures to divide the AK Party and to address the common enemy.

In 2008, the chief prosecutor at the Supreme Court of Appeals filed a dissolution case against the AK Party. His allegations included close relations between the government and the Gülen movement. This case remained the AK Party’s Sword of Damocles up until 2010. The party barely survived the dissolution case but it had to pay a huge fine.

In short, just as it is very superficial to reduce the tension between the movement and the government to prep schools, it is similarly unrealistic to date this tension back to the 2004 MGK decisions. My worry is that this tension, which has become extremely irrational, will be detrimental to the democratization process in the country. This would also be unfair to the Gülen movement, which has extended vital support to the reforms introduced over the last 11 years because this process of democratizing Turkey is a product of joint efforts.

On the other hand, it would be unrealistic to expect that the alliances formed to deal with the military guardianship would remain the same at a time when democratization has made some progress. There might be disparities between the political choices of the government and the preferences of the movement. It is incorrect to expect obedience but it is also not reasonable or correct to place pressure on the government by relying on options other than democratic channels or elections. This is actually a healthy process. The diversification of political choices makes the culture of democracy mature.

But the current tension does not imply this. It seems that there is a state of tension that pleases no one. Nobody wants to be unfair to the government or the Gülen movement; nobody wants to raise anti-propaganda against any of these groups. For this reason, we have no other option but to suggest patience and reason. And this is what should be done, considering that the deep state actors are pleased to see this taking place.

Source: Today's Zaman , December 4, 2013


Related News

Pakistan: Islamabad High Court rejects petition by Erdogan’s Maarif Foundation

The Islamabad High Court, while rejecting the petition filed by Turkey’s Maarif Foundation, decreed that there was no meaning in the foundation’s demand for inclusion in the case as it was out of the question for such foreign structures to find in themselves any right to take over the [Pak-Turk] schools in Pakistan.

Turks, Rio de Janeiro gov’t sign agreement to further education efforts in Brazil

The Brazilian-Turkish Cultural Center (CCBT) and the Rio de Janeiro state government signed an education cooperation agreement on Tuesday paving the way for the establishment of a long-anticipated “Brazil-Turkey Intercultural High School” by Turkish entrepreneurs sympathetic to the faith-based Gülen movement in Duque de Caxias, a city in southeast Brazil.

Australian PM praises int’l language festival’s contribution to peace

Receiving some 60 students from 19 countries who came to Australia as part of the 13th International Language and Culture Festival, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott has praised the event’s contribution to peace.

First International Science Projects Olympiads of Indonesia organized by the Turkish schools

Turkish schools in Indonesia organized an International Science Projects Olympiads in the country for the first time. Turkish schools affiliated with PASIAD, Pacific Social and Economic Solidarity Association, have been organizing national science Olympiads, ISPO, since they were founded.

Bittersweet joy for teachers amid prep schools conflict in Turkey

Zaman columnist Ali Ünal expresses how prep schools by the Hizmet movement were established under difficult circumstances under the leadership of Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen. Preps schools prevent students from falling into bad habits by giving them both life and schools lesson at the same time at reasonable prices, writes Ünal.

GYV warns on provocative remarks, urges respect for peaceful protests

The Journalists and Writers Foundation (GYV) on Friday called for the government to refrain from provocative statements that may undermine peace in the society and to respect the right of freedom of assembly, while denouncing the violence displayed in mass protests across Turkey that was triggered by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) attacks on the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani.

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

SEO Skill Suite: Tools for Keyword Research, Technical & Backlink Analysis

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

In Case You Missed It

Gülen’s brother at risk of death in prison

They think we are terrorists, they think we are evil

Canadian Globe Editorial- It just gets worse in Turkey

From Islamophobia to ‘Hizmet-phobia’

Mischief-makers and the Hizmet movement

Fethullah Gülen’s Message of Condolences and Condemnation of the Terrorist Attack in Istanbul

Erdoğan has to respect civil society

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News