Ahmet Altan has shown which side he’s on

Ahmet Altan
Ahmet Altan


Date posted: March 20, 2012

Today at his column, Ahmet Altan has talked about what has been spoken when his friends from Gulen Movement visited him. The Movement was on target following the releases of Nedim Şener and Ahmet Şık. At the reports of Stratfor that Taraf published, Movement faced serious allegations. After all these, representatives of the Movement visited Ahmet Altan, answering these allegations.

Ahmet Altan explained what would be his position if there were a conflict between the government and the movement. He talked about situations when he would support the government or the movement.

Here are some details of Ahmet Altan’s conversation with the members of the movement:

“Recently, my friends from the Gulen movement started visiting me more often. They are nice people that I like. They are complaining about the situation that they are in and our publishings of Stratfor. Some of them are expressing their concern in a well-mannered contrary to others.

Is he with the government or the movement?

I’ll tell you about what my friends from the movement said but first I want to show you my position if a conflict between two sides occurs. If the government and the movement get in a clash of power, so if the movement intends to share the power, I would take sides with the government. No matter whose government it is. It’s the politicians’ job to run for power, no one outside the politics can ask for political power. If they do, they should create their own political party.

If the Government blacklists people from the Movement, I would support the Movement

If the government blacklist people working for the state as “members of the movement” and if the government doesn’t let them get promotions because of this, I would support the movement. Because everyone is free at their beliefs, no one can interfere and blacklist them because of their beliefs.

If members of the movement use their positions for the good of the movement and if they lose their jobs because of this, I would support the government relieving them of duty.

Movement cannot be responsible for all this

Now let’s take a look at what our friends said. First I asked them about the Ahmet Şık and Nedim Şener. One of them responded clearly.

-“The ones responsible for these cannot be from our movement.”

He proves this by saying these detentions damaged the movement the most.

As far as I can tell, they don’t want to talk openly about the conflict between the movement and the government. They just say; “we have not changed, we are what we were 10 years ago, if there’s anything wrong, it’s not us.”

The first split from the Government occurred with the Sledgehammer Case

As I can tell, the first split happened with the Sledgehammer Case, when prosecutors called 25 generals for questioning, government objected and blamed it on the movement. My friend who is a bit more remonstrant, Alaattin Kaya, doesn’t accept that the recent attitude towards the movement is hurting them. He thinks it’s the same old trick, nothing changed.

Honestly, I don’t think so; because the movement is facing some allegations that should really bother “a group of believers”. So if they’re indifferent, I have nothing to say.

As far as I’m concerned, these recent happenings kind of changed the merciful, benevolent and righteous image that a pious group should have.

Movement is not ‘happy’ with Stratfor

Kaya is especially objecting our publishings of Stratfor reports, actually he is against our seeing it as a big deal. He thinks we are doing nothing other than helping the ones wanting to end the “Ergenekon case”. He is also critical of our putting the words of an ex-movement member, who is working at Hurriyet, saying it’s not even clear who he is.

Lastly, about the claims that movement requested 150 Mps from government, Kaya thinks this is definitely fiction and says directly publishing it is unfair.

Gulen was sad at whose arrest?

He told anecdotes about Gulen, once Fethullah Gulen told Kaya that he was so sad as a person he admired was arrested, but they haven’t done anything about it.***

Another time, when talking to Kaya Gulen told him that he was sorry as everything was blamed on him saying it was unfair.

*** Ahmet Altan next day made a correction and apologized. Alaattin Kaya calls him to clarify that he has not told “they (or Gulen) haven’t done anything about it”. He further tells that saying this means that Gulen can interfere with the judiciary and it is not possible.

Altan agrees and accepts that Mr. Kaya said [Gulen] was so sad when a person he admired was arrested and rest of the sentence does not belong to Mr. Kaya but himself.

Source: http://www.habera.com/Ahmet-Altan-Taraf-ini-belli-etti-haberi-140238.html

Disclaimer: The original article is in Turkish. Slight deviations from the original meaning may have occurred due to difficulties in translating phrases and idioms. PII volunteers translated the article.

 

 


Related News

We must have more empathy for people fleeing for their lives around the world

No individual’s pain is to be underestimated. Thousands of families are being forced to leave their homeland by violence, terror, or fear of political prosecution. I would like to particularly talk about people of Turkey, who has been forced to leave their country since the Turkish Government ordered a massive witch hunt on members of the Hizmet (Gulen) movement after the July 15, 2016 coup attempt.

Media and education challenge in Afghanistan

The resurgence of violence, a stubbornly lingering narcotic-financing chain and growing economic difficulties in Afghanistan have put a damper on optimism for the future of the country, yet I believe hope is still strong among the resilient Afghan people and certainly there is no shortage of success stories that will keep them going.

Eid-al-Adha – Neighborhood Generosity

Capping off this weekend’s Eid al-Adha celebration observed by nearly 2 billion people around the world, the Turkish Cultural Center of Queens (TCCQ), a local non-profit, is giving back locally.

UN-affiliated aid organization becomes new witch hunt target

As the largest volunteer and global aid organization based in Turkey, Kimse Yok Mu (Is Anybody There), which holds official UN consultative status, has become the target of a smear campaign carried out through the government-controlled media, while Kimse Yok Mu officials have said all their activities are transparent and that not a single flaw has been discovered at the end of months of government auditing.

A new Exilic Community: The Hizmet Movement

After the alleged military coup that failed, the Islamic-rooted government forced hundreds of thousands of faith-based community members out of Turkey, causing a massive diaspora of Turkish citizens (deprived, however, of their citizenship) around the world.

İstanbul Transportation Authority cancels bus line to Fatih University

Amid growing examples of discrimination against the Hizmet movement, the İstanbul Transportation Authority (İETT) canceled one bus line to Fatih University, which is considered to be affiliated with the Hizmet movement. An official from İETT, İsmihan Şimşek talked to Today’s Zaman and admitted that the 76F bus line had been canceled, but dismissed the idea that the decision deliberately targeted Fatih University. According to her, following analysis of demand for bus services in the region, the 76F bus line was discontinued while two other lines, HT18 and 418, continue to run with stops at Fatih University.

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

President emphasizes importance of domestic peace for development

A legal guidebook for ‘perception engineers’

The Role of The Gulen Movement in the Task of Eco-Justice

Conference declares gov’t needs to be more active in preventing domestic violence

Why Gulen Should Not Be Extradited

Preparations for Turkish Olympiads begin in Morocco

Turkish Human Rights Violations Put Under Microscope

Copyright 2024 Insightful Neighbor