Repression: Erdogan recruits diplomats to spy on his opponents (Part 4)
 
 
In the previous parts of the “Repression” series, we
discussed how the Turkish regime has exploited the intelligence services, gangs
and Interpol to implement its suspicious policies against the opposition.
In this fourth part, we review how Erdogan has succeeded in
transforming embassies and consulates into his arms, turning them into dens and
tools for espionage, and how he began to run intelligence campaigns to collect
data on organizations and people who reject the Turkish regime's policies.
During the era of Erdogan, especially following the alleged
July 2016 coup, it has become the task of Turkish diplomats to collect
information about the activities of the opposition, describe their
organizations and list their names, as if they were part of a terrorist
organization.
The communications from them contain information on major
opponents, including details about the structure of Fethullah Gülen’s Hizmet
movement in each country and a complete list of people believed to be
affiliated with it. The lists are also distributed to the Ministry of Justice
and the National Intelligence Organization (MIT) in order to take further
administrative or legal measures against persons who have been identified,
punishing them or their relatives in Turkey and seizing their assets.
Erdogan’s lastest crimes in this context are confirmed by
judicial documents, as Turkey’s diplomatic missions in Austria engaged in a
campaign to collect intelligence and gathered information about the activities
of opponents of the regime. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs was notified of the
names of Turkish teachers, representatives of local associations and
businessmen living in Austria, and then the information was used later in
criminal indictments on terrorism charges by the Turkish public prosecutor. Accordingly,
the public prosecutor opened a separate investigation into 13 Turkish citizens
in Austria who were spied on by Turkish diplomats in the country, without any
concrete evidence of wrongdoing, although the most prominent accusation is
belonging to Hizmet.
Opponents of Erdogan abroad, especially members of the Gulen
movement, face surveillance, harassment, death threats and kidnapping, and they
are often denied consular services such as power of attorney and birth
registration, as well as having their passports withdrawn. Their assets are
seized in Turkey, and their family members face criminal charges at home.
A secret Turkish government report also revealed the extent
of the infamous and secret espionage activities among the Lithuanian Muslim
community by a Turkish imam who worked under diplomatic cover outside the
Turkish embassy. Among the 16 people who were spied on in Lithuania, the
government revoked the passports of 12 of them, and only two faced a lawsuit.
In Turkey, the report indicates that they will all be subject to punitive
measures in Turkey because of their personal beliefs and their critical stance
against the Erdogan government.
Secret documents also confirmed that Turkish diplomats in
Kyrgyzstan spied on opponents of the regime and sent secret files to Ankara.
The Turkish public prosecutor opened an investigation into 25 citizens who had
files on them by Turkish diplomats in Kyrgyzstan without any tangible evidence
of committing any violations. Among those investigated were former
correspondents of the Turkish newspaper Zaman, which the government seized, in
addition to academics, teachers and doctors who had been living in the country
and working in Kyrgyz institutions for decades. The list also included
opponents who were forced to live in exile to escape the persecution of the
regime.
It is noteworthy that, according to judicial documents, the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs has compiled a long list of foreign entities owned
or managed by people perceived to be close to the Gülen movement in 92
countries in the Americas, Europe, Asia and Oceania.
The strange thing is that Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut
Cavusoglu had previously confirmed in February, after the Munich Security
Conference, the espionage activities carried out by Turkish diplomatic missions
in foreign lands, saying, “The Turkish diplomats appointed in embassies and
consulates have received official instructions from the government to conduct such
activities abroad, and that gathering intelligence information is the duty of
diplomats.”
It is worth noting that the immunities and privileges of
diplomats are subject to international agreements, and they are obligated to
respect the laws and regulations of the receiving state, avoid interference in
its internal affairs, and that they not carry out illegal information-gathering
campaigns or large-scale intelligence operations, which makes them vulnerable
to international or domestic prosecution in foreign countries, according to
Article 43 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Affairs.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


