Turkey continues assault on academics
DOI: 10.1063/PT.5.1105
On 22 April 2016 in Istanbul, hundreds of people protested the arrest of four academics who had signed a letter urging peace with the Kurds.
Ayşe Erzan
Seven months after a failed coup, the Turkish government has continued its relentless dismissal of civil servants, including physical scientists and other academics. More than 7300 academics have lost their jobs, according to the journalist-run website Turkey Purge
“People are getting fired for no reason whatsoever,” says Henri Barkey
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan blames the coup attempt on the Fethullahist Terror Organization (FETO), the government’s designation for a religious and social movement led by Fethullah Gülen, a former imam living in Pennsylvania. Gülen and his followers deny that accusation. Erdoğan also claims that the CIA is involved with FETO. As a result, Turkey’s treatment of Americans has deteriorated. The US State Department reports that Americans in the country have been deported and detained. Serkan Golge, a Houston-based NASA physicist and a citizen of both the US and Turkey, has been held without charges since late July.
Crackdown on higher ed
Turkey’s removal of academics began even before the coup attempt. In January 2016 more than 1100 Turkish academics signed an open letter
Erdoğan has moved far more quickly since the failed coup, emboldened by a state of emergency decree that allows the government to detain suspects without charging them with a crime. In the days that followed, Erdoğan shut down
“Many schools are open, but they don’t have professors,” says Ebby Abramson, a researcher and editor at Endangered Scholars Worldwide
The victims have included physicists, such as two researchers who work with CERN and the Turkish Accelerator Center Project. Ercan Piliçer
Losing a job and the salary that goes with it is hard enough, but Barkey says the government seems to have gone out of its way to inflict additional punishment. Fired civil servants are banned from working at any government institution for life. They lose accreditation if they earned their degree from a public Turkish university. They must forfeit access to the retirement fund they paid into during their tenure. And in many cases, the government restricts their international travel, preventing them from finding opportunities in other countries.
“There is widespread insecurity and fear, based on the dawning realization that no holds are barred,” says Erzan, who signed the January 2016 letter. She says the outlook for higher education and the country as a whole is “very bleak” unless Turkish voters come out strong against an upcoming referendum that calls for amending the constitution to give the president more power.
NASA physicist remains detained
Erdoğan’s swift action has spilled over to non-Turkish citizens. A 25 January travel warning
The risk is especially high for those who have both Turkish and US passports, because the Turkish government does not recognize dual citizenship. American journalist Lindsey Snell says she was told in August by US consular representatives in Turkey that a “substantial number” of dual citizens had been detained in Turkey, and US officials “hadn’t gotten access to any of them.” Though the State Department did not reply to a request for comment, its travel notice warns that “delays or denial of consular access to US citizens detained or arrested by security forces, some of whom also possess Turkish citizenship, have become more common.”
Serkan Golge, from his LinkedIn profile
Snell got her information while sitting in a jail cell in Iskenderun in southern Turkey. She had escaped Syria after being kidnapped by an Al Qaeda affiliate, only to be arrested
“He told me the police searched his home once and found nothing,” Snell says. “They returned for a second search and found a dollar bill.” American dollar bills
Golge has not been formally charged with a crime, says a source with knowledge of Golge’s situation who wishes to remain anonymous. (A Turkish diplomat who confirmed Golge’s detainment in August did not respond to repeated requests for comment.) Although the State Department won’t officially confirm that Golge is detained, Abramson of Endangered Scholars Worldwide reports that US diplomats are “working very, very hard to get him released.” The source says Golge is scheduled to appear in court on 17 April, the day after Turkey’s nationwide referendum.
More about the authors
Andrew Grant, agrant@aip.org