January/17/2014
Source: Hurriyet Daily News
The grave political turmoil and polarization in Turkey has triggered
uproar from leading civil society organizations that have declared that
both corruption allegations involving the government and claims about a
“parallel state” are harming democracy, peace and stability.
Representatives
of seven nongovernmental organizations held a joint press conference on
Jan. 17 to publicly express their concerns over the recent crisis in
the country.
“We, who produce and work for Turkey, have come
together to assess the process that we have been experiencing,” said a
joint declaration issued by the Confederation of Turkish Craftsmen and
Tradesmen (TESK), the Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges (TOBB),
the Turkish Union of Agricultural Chambers (TZOB), the Confederation of
Turkish Labor Unions (TÜRK-İş), the Turkish Confederation of Employers’
Unions (TİSK), the Labor Confederation (HAK-İŞ) and the Civil Servants
Trade Union (MEMUR-SEN), whose representatives were present at the press
conference.
“The corruption claims and parallel state claims
that have infested the environment have been threatening societal peace
and stability and openly posing a danger against our internal peace,”
the group said, urging the authorities to work toward enlightening all
claims.
The term “parallel state” is commonly used by critics of
the followers of the U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, many of
whom have been employed in the judicial and security bureaucracy.
The government recently accelerated a purge of a judiciary Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan considers to be embroiled in a plot to undermine him with specious corruption allegations.
The
removal of a series of high-profile prosecutors on Jan. 16 hit at the
heart of investigations made public on Dec. 17, 2013, that have put
Erdoğan into one of the biggest crises of his 11 years in power. They
came a day after the government tightened its grip on a panel that
controls the appointment of all judges and prosecutors.
The
developments, which will deepen segregation in society instead of
strengthening unity and solidarity and threaten the trust in agencies
and institutions, are making it harder for people to focus on peace,
democracy and developments, TESK head Bendevi Palandöken said.
The
civil society grouping also underlined that Turkey was still waiting
for a new Constitution that complies with the principles of universal
law and EU standards.
Erdoğan’s supporters see Gülen – a former
ally whose network of followers is influential in the police and
judiciary – as a prime mover in a smear campaign. Erdoğan sees the
investigation, like the Gezi Park Resistance in 2013, as a
“foreign-backed plot.”
The affair has exposed a deep rift within
the political establishment, shaking markets, helping drive the Turkish
Lira to new lows and prompting expressions of alarm from Washington and
Brussels about threats to the independence of the judiciary.
Link: http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-ngos-want-action-on-corruption-parallel-state-claims.aspx?pageID=238&nID=61200&NewsCatID=338#.
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