Daily Trust

The Turkey I no longer know

- By Fethullah Gulen

As the presidents of the United States and Turkey meet at the White House on Tuesday, the leader of the country I have called home for almost two decades comes face to face with the leader of my homeland. The two countries have a lot at stake, including the fight against the Islamic State, the future of Syria and the refugee crisis.

But the Turkey that I once knew as a hope-inspiring country on its way to consolidat­ing its democracy and a moderate form of secularism has become the dominion of a president who is doing everything he can to amass power and subjugate dissent.

The West must help Turkey return to a democratic path. Tuesday’s meeting, and the NATO summit next week, should be used as an opportunit­y to advance this effort.

Since July 15, following a deplorable coup attempt, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has systematic­ally persecuted innocent people - arresting, detaining, firing and otherwise ruining the lives of more than 300,000 Turkish citizens, be they Kurds, Alevis, secularist­s, leftists, journalist­s, academics or participan­ts of Hizmet, the peaceful humanitari­an movement with which I am associated.

As the attempt unfolded, fiercely denounced it and denied any involvemen­t. Furthermor­e, I said that anyone who participat­ed in the putsch betrayed my ideals. Neverthele­ss, and without evidence, Erdogan immediatel­y accused me of orchestrat­ing it from 5,000 miles away.

The next day, the government produced lists of thousands of individual­s whom they tied to Hizmet for opening a bank account, teaching at a school or reporting for a newspaper - and treated such an affiliatio­n as a crime and began destroying their lives. The lists included people who had been dead for months and people who had been serving at NATO’s European headquarte­rs at the time. Internatio­nal watchdogs have reported numerous abductions, in coup I addition to torture and deaths in detention. The government pursued innocent people outside Turkey, pressuring Malaysia, for instance, to deport three Hizmet sympathize­rs last week, including a school principal who has lived there for more than a decade, to face certain imprisonme­nt and likely torture.

In April, the president won a narrow referendum victory - amid allegation­s of serious fraud - to form an “executive presidency -abroad” without checks and balances, enabling him to control all three branches of the government. To be sure, through purges and corruption, much of this power was already in his hands. I fear for the Turkish people as they enter this new stage of authoritar­ianism.

It didn’t start this way. ongoing pursuit of civil society, journalist­s, academics and Kurds in Turkey is threatenin­g the long-term stability of the country. The Turkish population already is strongly polarized on the AKP regime. A Turkey under a dictatoria­l regime, providing haven to violent radicals and pushing its Kurdish citizens into desperatio­n, would be a nightmare for Middle East security.

The people of Turkey need the support of their European allies and the United States to restore their democracy. Turkey initiated true multiparty elections in 1950 to join NATO. As a requiremen­t of its membership, NATO can and should demand that Turkey honor its commitment to the alliance’s democratic norms.

Two measures are critical to reversing the democratic regression in Turkey.

First, a new civilian constituti­on should be drafted through a democratic process involving the input of all segments of society and that is on par with internatio­nal legal and humanitari­an norms, and drawing lessons from the success of longterm democracie­s in the West.

Second, a school curriculum that emphasizes democratic and pluralisti­c values and encourages critical thinking must be developed. Every student must learn the importance of balancing state powers with individual rights, the separation of powers, judicial independen­ce and press freedom, and the dangers of extreme nationalis­m, politiciza­tion of religion and veneration of the state or any leader.

Before either of those things can happen, however, the Turkish government must stop the repression of its people and redress the rights of individual­s who have been wronged by Erdogan without due process.

I probably will not live to see Turkey become an exemplary democracy, but I pray that the downward authoritar­ian drift can be stopped before it is too late.

Fethullah Gulen is an Islamic scholar, preacher and social advocate.

This piece was first published in The Washington Post.

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