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Fethullah Gulen

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  • Poster advertising the Turkish television series "Red Buds"
    Turkey

    "Red Buds" – a TV series divides the country

    The Turkish media authority has imposed a two-week broadcasting ban and fine on the series "Red Buds", in which religious and liberal worlds collide. The series is apparently too close to the bone

  • Turkey

    AKP under scrutiny for ties to ultraconservative Islamic community

    The ultraconservative Ismail Aga community has close links to Turkey's ruling AKP. Some are now questioning the community's influence after news reports of the forced marriage of a six-year-old girl within the group. By Burak Ünveren

  • From a standing start, Recep Tayyip Erdogan's AKP won an absolute majority on 3 November 2002, taking 363 out of 550 seats. The AKP has won all parliamentary elections in Turkey ever since.
    Turkey

    20 years of Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the AKP

    On 3 November 2002, Erdogan's newly founded AKP, Justice and Development Party, came to power in Turkey. It has ruled the country ever since, becoming more authoritarian with each victory. By Elmas Topcu

  • Mafia scandal in Turkey

    Mafia ties run deep in AKP politics

    Rarely have the links between Turkish politics and organised crime been as apparent as they are at present. Right-wing extremist mafia godfathers from the Grey Wolves are increasingly appearing in government circles. So what's behind all this? Daniel Derya Bellut has the details

  • Film poster "Invisible".
    Film review: Marianna Kakaounaki’s "Invisible"

    Turkish refugees in Greece – out of sight, out of mind

    Turkish refugees are for the most part invisible in Greece. In her film debut, the Greek journalist and filmmaker Marianna Kakaounaki portrays the fate of Turkish followers of the preacher Fethullah Gulen forced to flee their country after the coup attempt against Erdogan in 2016. Rene Wildangel caught a screening at the Thessaloniki Documentary Festival

  • Turkey

    Sect leader Adnan Oktar – 1,000 years for sex crimes

    A Turkish court has sentenced Islamic television preacher and author Adnan Oktar to more than 1,000 years in jail for crimes including forming and leading a criminal gang, fraud and sexual abuse

  • Ankara School pioneer and reformist Islamic theologian

    The resignation of Turkish Koran exegete Mustafa Ozturk

    Professor of theology and Qantara interview partner Mustafa Ozturk has resigned from an Istanbul university after immense pressure from certain segments of the Islamic community, having advocated a version of Islam they deemed "blasphemous". Ayse Karabat reports from Istanbul

  • Freedom of the press

    Turkey's Pelican group – Erdoganʹs state within a state?

    After Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government set its sights on critical news outlet OdaTV, several of its journalists now face harsh prison sentences. Is Turkey's president using a secret group to control judges? By Hulya Schenk & Daniel Derya Bellut

  • Dismissed by decree in Turkey

    Social lynching, Erdogan's potent weapon

    After the attempted coup in Turkey in 2016, 134,000 people lost their jobs. Most of them are still unemployed and have to fight for health services and pensions. Many suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. By Tunca Ogreten

  • Released from prison

    Turkish author Ahmet Altan and the power of words

    The Turkish writer and journalist Ahmet Altan was imprisoned for three years and four months. He had always been outspoken and he remained outspoken in prison, where he wrote a collection of essays and a novel. He has now been awarded the Geschwister-Scholl-Preis for his tireless dedication. By Gerrit Wustmann

  • Third anniversary of the attempted coup in Turkey

    "A gift from Allah" for Erdogan

    Three years after the failed coup, it's not victory fanfares sounding for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, but alarm bells. Can Dündar, former editor-in-chief of the Turkish newspaper "Cumhuriyet", on the day that changed everything

  • Interview with Turkish Islamic scholar Professor Mustafa Ozturk

    "Religious groups need to be transparent"

    Mustafa Ozturk, a professor specialising in "tafsir" – Koranic exegesis – at Istanbulʹs Marmara University was recently accused of blasphemy. Convinced that various Islamic groups seeking to influence Turkish politics are responsible, Ozturk is actively considering self-imposed exile. Interview by Ayse Karabat

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