Erdoğan's advisor turns out to be a chief terrorism backer
The Turkish president’s chief aide, who advises on Turkey’s relations with Arab and Muslim nations, was found to have been a staunch supporter of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, listed by the United Nations Security Council as an al-Qaeda-affiliated group, an investigation by the news site, Nordic Monitor, which focuses on extremism and terrorism, found out.
In a series of articles that
appeared mainly in pro-Iran publications in Turkey in the 1990s, Sefer Turan,
who now serves as chief advisor to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and
influences the country’s foreign policy, defended the terrorist group, justified
the murders of civilians and government officials in Egypt and leveled
criticism against others who described the Islamic Jihad as a terrorist group
and condemned the murders.
For example, writing for Turkish
magazine Tevhid, funded by the Iranian secret service, back in September 1992,
Turan applauded how the Egyptian Islamic Jihad made huge progress with attacks
that claimed the lives of many people.
"When we assess the latest
attacks by the Islamic Jihad in Egypt, we can see that they made great progress
in tactics and in targeting areas. First and foremost, not a single one of them
involved in the attacks got caught,” Turan wrote, adding, "The success
that the Islamic Jihad gained in resistance and counterattacks against the
police put the Egyptian government in a difficult position in the public eye."
Sefer described militants who
were killed in clashes with Egyptian security services as "martyrs"
and claimed that the Egyptian people had lined up behind the organization, did
not question the attacks, but, instead, protested against the government when
the police launched a crackdown on Islamic Jihad members.
"People took to the streets,
torched various government buildings and protested strongly against government
policies and the police’s ugly attitude," he wrote.
The Turkish president’s advisor
appeared satisfied with the attacks, saying, "Moreover, the attacks
against tourists and the tourism industry, which dealt a huge blow to the
country’s economy, put the government in a difficult position."
In his provocative article, Turan
also suggested that Christians in Egypt were aiming to establish their own
state, maintain an armed Christian militia and use churches to stockpile
weaponry while the Egyptian government simply turned a blind eye to the Christians’
activities.
Instead, he argued, Muslims and
Islamic groups showed sensitivity in the matter and had been raising the issue
in the public debate.
Adding further to the claims in
his article, Erdoğan’s
aide wrote that Christians in Egypt were encouraged by Pope Shenouda III, the
head of the Coptic Orthodox Church at the time, whom Turan said had good
relations with the United States and former United Nations Secretary-General
Boutros-Boutros Ghali, a Coptic Christian, and who Turan maintained had family
ties to then-Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Turan concluded his article by
saying that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak would have a hard time sustaining
his government in Egypt amid the challenges, but that only time would tell,
expressing hope that the Islamic Jihad would take over the Egyptian government.




