A legal guidebook for ‘perception engineers’

Bulent Korucu
Bulent Korucu


Date posted: July 1, 2014

BÜLENT KORUCU

The campaign to manipulate public perceptions of Fethullah Gülen and the Hizmet movement which is inspired by Gülen’s ideas is stepping up pace once again. The “wag-the-dog” strategy is wielded once again in an effort to distract public attention.

The fact that the circles looking to manipulate perceptions of the movement parrot the same old arguments indicates that they lack any strong evidence to support their case. The funny thing is that the illusion show betrays the perception engineers’ sheer lack of knowledge about laws. Another absurdity is that they rely on some prosecutors for their scandalous moves or claims about the implementation of laws. They ridiculously suggest that experienced prosecutors make technical errors even first-year law school students wouldn’t make. Government newspapers have for a long time paid no heed to professional ethics. However, I am not inclined to believe that prosecutors do not know or care about written legal texts. So it is best to believe that such simple mistakes are made by journalists.

Hoping that prosecutors are already informed about these simple legal facts, I would like to give technical support to our colleagues at Sabah, Yeni Şafak, Star and other government papers. “Prosecutors are examining all the activities of Fethullah Gülen since 1989. The acquittal and non-prosecution decisions are being scrutinized one by one,” they say. Lesson 1: The court decision acquitting Gülen — which became final after being reviewed by the Supreme Court of Appeals — concerns the period and crimes in question. A prosecutor can examine a court decision upheld by the relevant chamber and the Supreme Court of Appeals only with the intention of expanding his or her knowledge. Any prosecutor who sees himself superior to the Supreme Court of Appeals is quickly referred to the asylum. Even the janitors of courthouses know this simple fact. Do not humiliate yourselves. Lesson 2: There is the statute of limitations concerning criminal law. The crimes in question expire after 20 years at most. 1989+20=2009. A prosecutor who examines the case files which were subjected to the statute of limitations five years ago will gain nothing but an archive of case files. Lesson 3: The “Rahşan Amnesty,” or the Law on Probation and Deferment of Sentences, enacted in 2000, introduced an indirect pardoning of crimes committed before April 23, 1999. Many people, including some former Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militants who were convicted on various charges, applied to courts which then canceled the legal consequences of their sentences. In other words, nothing can be done even to former convicts, let alone those who were acquitted from charges like Gülen.

Attention, Hürriye and Milliyet

This section will be beneficial particularly for Hürriyet and Milliyet newspapers. On Feb. 24, Star and Yeni Şafak newspapers allegedly reported that the phone lines of 7,000 people are bugged and published photos of some public figures they allege to have been bugged, such as Ertuğrul Özkök, Ahmet Ertürk, Mehmet Bekaroğlu and Yılmaz Ateş. Later, they had to reduce this figure down to 2,280 and eventually 130. However, this list was consigned to oblivion after the government reassigned many prosecutors and police chiefs in İstanbul to other provinces. At that time, the objections people had raised — saying that people’s phones cannot be wiretapped without a court order and the Telecommunications Directorate (TİB) cannot permit unlawful bugging of private conversations — were lost in the noise. Two days ago, Yeni Şafak re-ran the same story, publishing the same photos. This time, the direct target is TİB. The story claimed that conversations of 64 people were wiretapped between 2008 and 2010, with the endorsement of TİB. As they learned a lesson from the first story, they refrained from unconvincing figures. An air of mystery was added to the story by a reference to satellite dishes. Dissident figures were carefully brought to the fore, with the apparent message, “Bogeymen will come and get you if you don’t surrender to us.”

It is clear that this new campaign directly targets TİB. A number of objections of a technical nature can be raised. “TİB is simply verifying whether prosecutors comply with laws. The wiretapping is done by law enforcement officials who first obtain a court order,” it may be suggested. But this effort would be futile. But there is something that boggles my mind: the head of TİB was Fethi Şimşek at that time. The government later made him the chief public prosecutor for Ankara, which indicates that the government finds him quite dependable. At that time, similar charges were being hurled against TİB from another camp. These attacks from the Judges and Prosecutors Association (YARSAV) and judge Ömer Faruk Eminağaoğlu were quite effective in that they forced the police to conduct searches at TİB three times. As they had voiced the serious accusation that the Supreme Court of Appeals had been bugged, the TİB investigation was quite diligent. If any irregularity had been detected, the pro-Ergenekon media outlets were ready to launch a media lynching campaign.

Şimşek defends TİB’s wiretapping practices

Şimşek held a press conference on Nov. 12, 2009 to voice his objections to the irrelevant police raids. He said that TİB is not authorized to decide whether to wiretap a conversion as it is the courts and prosecutors who should call the shots in this respect. Şimşek defended TİB’s wiretapping practices, saying, “Our wiretapping practices which are being contested are in full compliance with laws and regulations.” Then-Transportation and Communications Minister Binali Yıldırım had voiced similar criticisms: “All wiretapping requests are examined by courts before court-approved requests are sent to TİB. Then, these court orders are examined and implemented by TİB. TİB rejected more than 5,000 wiretapping requests while accepting some 70,000 demands. Accepted ones involve about one-thousandth of the population. There is a common misconception: TİB does not tap any conversations that it does not have the authorization to. The institution’s duty is to permit or deny the authorities when they seek to wiretap certain communications. In the past, telecommunication companies would do this.”

Doesn’t it sound odd to you that Şimşek — who, as the head of TİB, had been accused of engaging in wiretapping — is now the prosecutor who makes the wiretapping accusations? Was he under hypnosis when private communications were being illegally wiretapped with satellite dishes on the roof of TİB’s building? “Court orders were obtained,” they say. Which court orders? Is an ounce of imagination enough to make claims about so-called evidential documents? For something to be accepted as an evidential document, it should be shown with the signatures at the bottom.

It is virtually impossible for these allegations to be legally accepted as valid. But they are used as justification for the purge of bureaucrats at many public institutions and it fits a wag-the-dog strategy perfectly. The journalists who collaborate closely with the perception engineers write tragicomic articles, asking, “How does it feel to be wiretapped?”

Source: Todays Zaman , May 31, 2014


Related News

Reaction mounts against PM’s witch-hunt remarks

Politicians, members of the judiciary and journalists have spoken out against threatening remarks by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who stated that the government will carry out a witch hunt against followers of a faith-based group [Hizmet movement].

Escape from Turkey’s parallel reality

As a law-abiding citizen, I knew I had done nothing wrong to be stopped at the border. But in Turkey being a journalist from Zaman media group was enough for me to be considered an “enemy of the state.” And I was the editor-in-chief of Today’s Zaman which had been brutally taken over a few days earlier, earning me a suspended jail sentence for my tweets criticizing then-Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu.

Turkey’s Erdogan takes cue from Hitler, Stalin and Khomeini

There is something deeply disturbing about the direction in which Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Justice and Development Party are taking Turkey. Writing in this newspaper last week, John Lyons compared the sweeping purges to McCarthyism in the US in the 1950s. That was altogether the wrong analogy.

GYV: PM’s discriminatory rhetoric undermines social peace

Arguments and discriminatory rhetoric used by the prime minister against the Hizmet movement spoil the emotional well-being of our people; undermine social peace and prepare the groundwork for violence by sowing the seeds of hatred in society, the Journalists and Writers Foundation (GYV) said in a forceful statement published on its website on Thursday.

Fethullah Gulen and His Movement: A Brief Introduction

KASHIF HASAN KHAN July 1, 2012 We often talk about revivalism in education system so as to change the direction of our young generation, who seems to have forgotten the very fundamentals. Undoubtedly, our leaders have played a vital role and contributed a lot to it, but we can’t live up to that forever; we […]

Gulen movement’s three pillars

The book of Mehmet Gundem “The Necessary Man” which is about the life of Turkish Jew Ishak Alaton has interesting details. According to Alaton, the accomplishment of the Gulen movement is based on three pillars: Gulen went beyond ordinary First, Mr. Gulen thinks outside the box. He broke taboos in Turkey and he brought together […]

Latest News

Fethullah Gulen – man of education, peace and dialogue – passes away

Fethullah Gülen’s Condolence Message for South African Human Rights Defender Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Hizmet Movement Declares Core Values with Unified Voice

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

Gulen movement becoming victim of its own legend

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Turkish Islamic scholar Gülen decries domestic violence

Erdogan: Turkey’s man of mystery armed with extra powers

Renewing Islam by Service: A Christian View of Fethullah Gulen and the Hizmet Movement

More Divisions, More Democracy

CHP applies to Constitutional Court for annulment of dershane law

Copyright 2025 Insightful Neighbor