Erdogan-Gulen feud threatens AKP’s political future
Called “Hizmet” or service, the movement emerged in the 1970s around the charismatic young Fethullah Gulen. Today aged 73, the preacher has lived in the eastern US state of Pennsylvania since he left Turkey in 1999 to escape prosecution on charges of “anti-secular activities.” His self-imposed exile came before Erdogan’s government came to power in 2002 in a victory that raised concern both in and outside secular Turkey. Gulen is said to wield huge influence back home, with followers in key positions in the police and judiciary — two sectors Erdogan, 59, has purged as the men’s rivalry heats up. Gulen rarely speaks openly to the media but uses official spokesmen.
His organization revolves around a network of schools in more than 100 countries that promote Turkish culture and a moderate Islamic viewpoint. It also has a series of television stations and is connected with the biggest paper in Turkey, the Istanbul-based Zaman, which also presents a moderate Islamic take on world events.
The Hizmet brotherhood says it has several million followers and an influential network in business circles. Numerous elected officials or figures close to power are seen as Gulen allies, including the current President Abdullah Gul and the Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc. After the landslide victory of Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) in legislative elections 11 years ago, Hizmet was one of the government’s main allies. The two groups share similar conservative political and religious views. Both also maintained distance from the military, which sees itself as guarantor of Turkey’s secular establishment.
Hizmet notably secured a following in critical state institutions like the police and the judiciary, which traditionally had been closer to the “old Kemalist regime.”
In recent years, however, splits appeared in their alliance. Last June, when police cracked down violently on anti-government protests engulfing the country, both President Gul and Deputy Prime Minister Arinc initially broke with the government’s hard line and urged it to go easy on the demonstrators. The cracks broke wide open last month, however, when the Erdogan government announced its intention to close the network of “dershane,” private schools offering students extra tutoring. The Hizmet brotherhood directs hundreds of such schools in Turkey, which has provided a main source of its revenue.
For Erdogan, there is no doubt that the Gulen brotherhood is behind the anti-corruption probe that implicated dozens of the prime minister’s close allies, including his own son. The inquiry forced the embattled Erdogan, said to be a presidential-hopeful in 2014, into a massive government reshuffle after three ministers resigned. Defiant despite calls for his resignation, the prime minister ordered an unprecedented purge in the police, sacking dozens of officers said to be linked to Gulen. He accused them of failing to notify him about the corruption investigations.
The Gulenists hit back, however, when Turkeys’ top court on Friday blocked implementation of a government decree ordering police to inform their superiors before launching investigations issued by public prosecutors, local media reported.
While the Hizmet brotherhood up to now has shown no electoral ambitions, analysts expect the war between the two sides to have an impact on 2014 municipal elections.
“The myth of the unsinkable AKP is now over,” wrote columnist Cihan Celik in the Hurriyet Daily News on Saturday.
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