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Revelations How the CIA debunked Erdogan?

February 16, 2016 By administrator

arton122155-473x254The article below, translated from the Turkish by the MAFF, published February 28, 2014 in Time Turk, is a summary of an interview given by Sibel Edmonds Boling Frog Post January 18, 2014, under the title “The rapid transformation an imperial puppet “(see link at bottom of page).

Since then, the interview was reproduced and commented almost a hundred times in many languages ​​until December 2015.

Here is an outline

By Sibel EDMONDS

I have long lived in Turkey and closely followed the internal politics of that country. In reality, the purpose of my lawsuit, as a member of the FBI, was of leaking secret negotiations between Turkey and the United States. That got me to be persona non grata in the United States in Turkey. At the time, Erdogan was considered an angel by the US and then suddenly he became enemy because of its current policy. The CIA creates the world of puppet governments and overnight made them disappear. Erdogan he would suffer the same fate? The most blatant example is that of Saddam Hussein, initially there were congratulations between Donald Rumsfeld and Saddam, then the occupation of the country and the removal of Saddam. The same process is it not also booked Erdogan? The story begins with the draft Fethullah Gülen.

In 1997, the CIA relied on Gülen who wanted to establish Canon Law of Islam (Şeriyat) in Turkey, however, it was the reason he was prosecuted in his country. The CIA offered to settle in America and, for 15 years, it lives in the United States. It controls a financial network of 20-25 billion. Nobody is aware of the source of these funds.

Gülen has built outside the United States schools, madrasas (Islamic schools) and other institutions in various countries. The governments of these countries considering them as a threat to their sovereignty and their institutions closed all schools of Gülen.

Gülen and the CIA have created networks in Turkey in police spheres, justice, army and media. It is through these measures that Erdogan shone and been in power. In fact, in 1997 on the intervention of the CIA, the AK Party was banned and Erdogan imprisoned. In 2002, the army backed down and allowed Erdogan to become prime minister. So what has he spent between 1997-2002? Gülen was already in the United States.

Erdogan had gained popularity and claimed he never would bend before the imam, the people loved him. “The imam or not it will not prevent me from achieving a sovereign manner all my projects,” he said. What was the reason for this personal confidence? Its very tough attitude toward Israel? In the US, Gülen enjoyed great support of the Jewish lobby.

This is the second phase battle between Erdogan and Gulen on support of the Jewish lobby. Erdogan’s attacks against Israel were not much appreciated by Gülen. The bell had rung of separation. Immediately after, it was the case of Syria that arises. Turkey and the AKP government supported the opponents of the Syrian regime, which they were arming via the United States. Until then, everything went according to the plans for the overthrow of Assad. An unexpected event occurred, it was the Russian intervention which forced the United States to review its foreign policy in this region.

In Turkey, on the one hand the people had good relations with Syria and Assad, on the other hand Syria is a neighboring Islamic country of Turkey.

With the withdrawal of the United States, Erdogan left alone and deprived of American support. The CIA and Gülen had resumed their activities in Turkey. Erdogan quickly understood that these maneuvers were around Gezi Park. We must not forget that the manifestation of Gezi Park was originated by popular action. The Western press began to treat Erdogan of “Dictator”. His relationship with Al Qaeda were revealed.

Expected by the CIA of Turkey? The CIA project was to keep the country under its control, control policy. Thus they were able to hold Erdogan to head the government.

The CIA plan was to use Turkey as a model to influence other Muslim states of Central Asia. Erdogan and Gulen were considered the promoters of the CIA action plan.

The CIA lost a puppet state (Erdogan) that was beyond his control.

Erdogan to demonstrate its non-submission to CIA requirements stated: “The arms purchases that represent billions of dollars I will not do them either with you or with the United States, I will make with China. “

It was a serious error of his vis-à-vis part of the United States and NATO. This attitude irritated the members of the American Armament Industries and NATO.

The integration of Turkey into the EU dragged on, Erdogan asked the integration into the Shanghai Union. This attitude was his last threat, and was considered a vis-à-vis insurrection of his bosses. This means the end of your existence.

Therefore, the United States had to demonstrate the severity of the punishments they could inflict on other states. It was submitted to Erdogan possibilities. The first obligation: You shall reverse, you will improve your relations with Israel, you will give up your desire to purchase weapons to China and your membership in the Shanghai Group.

The second obligation: You’re going to resign and go quietly, because we have prepared your replacement (Ç.N: CHP); stolen and hoarded money, you can take it with you, we will allow you to go in the UK.

The third requirement is two scenarios: First, you disappear like Gaddafi and Saddam, we’ll find you on Taksim Gezi Park to. Second, you can go like Mubarak, we will keep you in a prison in the UK where you will stay for the rest of your life.

So Erdogan in front of those choices. The same had been offered to Gaddafi, Saddam and Mubarak. The CIA works that way. In a few months we will see the end of this story, because this situation can not last longer.

Daughter of an Azerbaijani doctor, Sibel Edmonds was born in 1970 in Iran. After a few years she went to Turkey before settling in the United States to continue his studies. During his collaboration with the FBI, she discovered and denounced acts of espionage and of withholding information that could endanger national security of the United States. After warning his superiors, she was silenced by the FBI and in her stubbornness, dismissed in March 2002. The legal proceedings instituted ultimately leads to the use of the state secrets privilege by the Attorney General of the United States John Ashcroft; Congress was even prevented from proceedings and deliberations of the case. She graduated in March 2006 PEN / Newman’s Own First Amendment Award (price of an association of writers) for his contribution to the simple freedom of expression which every American citizen has from birth.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: CIA, Erdogan, Gulen, Turkey

Turkey: Turkish Imam Gulen-linked police chiefs face massive conspiracy trials

February 16, 2016 By administrator

gulen.thumbTurkey’s struggle to bring members and supporters of the controversial Gulen Movement to justice continues, 143 defendants, including former police chiefs, went on trial yesterday at an Istanbul court, Daily Sabah reports.
Defendants, linked to the movement, are accused of conducting illegal wiretaps on hundreds of people and helping the movement to attempt to overthrow the government.
The Gulen Movement, led by the United States-based retired preacher Fethullah Gülen, faces charges of terrorism as several investigations branded the group’s sympathizers as members of the Gulenist Terror Organization / Parallel State Structure.
Ali Fuat Yilmazer, a former high-ranking member of the police intelligence unit, and Erol Demirhan, who replaced him as head of the Istanbul Police’s intelligence unit, are among dozens of names arrested in summer 2014 as part of efforts to purge the Gülenists’ clout from within law enforcement. The two men appeared before the Istanbul 13th Court for the first time yesterday, along with police officers of various ranks in a trial for espionage and illegal wiretapping amid tight security measures. The Istanbul Chief Prosecutor’s office presented an indictment to the court against Yılmazer and others. The defendants are accused of wiretapping the phones of hundreds of people despite the absence of a legal warrant, allegedly for the purposes of blackmail and to supply the information to the FETÖ / PDY.
The prosecutor is asking for aggravated life terms for all defendants on charges related to the alleged coup attempt. A long list of charges against Yılmazer range from founding and running a criminal organization, political or military espionage, forgery of official documents, violation of privacy of communications, illegal wiretapping, acquiring data illegally and defamation. The charges in total carry up to 1,000 years of prison terms.

Defendants allegedly conducted illegal wiretapping from 2008 to 2013, the years the Gülen Movement launched attempts to topple the government. The indictment says the defendants targeted “prominent public figures, journalists, bureaucrats and leaders of religious communities” and “sought to associate them with terrorist organizations or terrorism, and to wiretap them with false warrants.” According to media reports, this is a common tactic of the Gülen Movement, as the group is accused of scheming to implicate its critics through sham trials launched by prosecutors and ruled by judges linked to Gülenists. The indictment also says the victims of wiretapping had no past record of conviction, and their activities did not require a surveillance operation. Prosecutors say they were wiretapped under false names as an attempt by the Gulenists to cover their tracks.
Yilmazer was also implicated in the investigation over negligence of public officials in the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in 2007. Yılmazer and other high-ranking police chiefs were accused of covering up intelligence reports of a murder plot to kill Dink.
The trial comes one day after six suspects, including former police chiefs, were arrested for another mass wiretapping by Gülen affiliates. Their arrests were part of an investigation in the “Selam-Tevhid plot.” Gülenist infiltrators within law enforcement and the judiciary face charges of creating a fake terrorist organization they named Selam-Tevhid – a group they linked to Iran – to justify the wiretapping of hundreds of people including Daily Sabah employees. The wiretapping had targeted everyone from journalists to National Intelligence Organization (MİT) Chief Hakan Fidan who currently heads the country’s leading intelligence service.
The Gulen Movement, which boasts a large international following through its wide network of schools, companies and nonprofit organizations around the world, evolved from a simple religious community to a politicized cult. The group is now the target of multiple investigations into its activities in Turkey.
The indictment against Yılmazer and others also gave insight into the rise of the Gülen Movement. It said the movement grew in the 1990s and gained a foothold in 160 countries. It cites the group as a worldwide organization with immense financial and intelligence power. “Fethullah Gülen views himself as a spiritual leader to the world’s Muslims,” according to the indictment, where he is defined as the leader of the FETÖ / PDY. Gülen’s case was referred to prosecutors in the capital, Ankara, where he is a defendant in various cases regarding the Gülenists’ illegal activities.
Gulen resides in Pennsylvania and has no intention of returning to Turkey for his trials, as his lawyers have indicated. Authorities are working on an extradition process with the United States, as the first trial for Gülen started last year. If extradited, the 74-year-old will likely spend the rest of his life in prison, as the coup attempt charges he faces carry multiple life sentences.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: chifs, Gulen, police, Turkey

With Clinton’s helps Turkish Imam Gulen Charter Schools dominate in the USA

February 12, 2016 By administrator

Gulen and Clintons“Gulen Charter Schools USA”,a factual look at a worldwide movement to dominate education. Read about the “Gulen Charter Schools” in the USA as well as worldwide. Share our ride exploring the Gulen Movement tactics. These postings are based on news articles, government documents such as H1-b Visa info, IRS information.

Gulen Empire map from Turkish Newspaper. DISCLAIMER: If you find some videos are disabled this is the work of the Gulen censorship who have filed fake copyright infringement reports to UTUBE

**RED ALERT**- Gets approval for school on Nellis AFB **RED ALERT**

If any of you have any clout in the Air Force, related to anyone that is retired Air Force or active duty.  It was confirmed by calling Nellis AFB in Las Vegas, Nevada that the Gulen Movement operated Coral Academy of Science- has received the approval to convert the Lomie Heard Elementary school on the base into a charter school. If you know anyone in the Las Vegas, NV area that can host a town hall meeting with the military families – we must act QUICKLY as they want to open this school by August 2016.   

12/4/2015 – NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE, Nev. — Beginning in the 2016-2017 school year, elementary-age children of Department of Defense employees will have the option of attending an on-base public charter school.

Lomie G. Heard Elementary School, the current on-base school which was constructed on Nellis Air Force Base in 1951, will no longer be part of the Clark County School District (CCSD) at the end of the 2015-2016 school year.

CCSD leases the land on Nellis AFB where Lomie G. Heard is located. The lease will expire at the end of the current school year and the U.S. Air Force is currently in negotiations with Coral Academy of Science Las Vegas to bring a public charter school on base.

“Nellis Air Force Base and the CCSD have had a long and mutually-beneficial relationship,” said Col. Richard Boutwell, 99th Air Base Wing commander. “Lomie G. Heard Elementary School and their wonderful staff have inspired multiple generations of military children and laid the foundation for their futures.

“We had a unique opportunity to partner with an established Nevada public charter school — Coral Academy of Science Las Vegas — that not only brings a great academic program, but plans to build a new kindergarten through eighth grade school at no cost to the Air Force,” Boutwell said. “The facility will be within the Landings Housing complex and is expected to be ready for use starting in the 2018 academic year. A new school is simply something neither the U.S. Air Force nor CCSD could realistically expect to be able to do in the foreseeable future. This really is a great opportunity for our children.”

CASLV, which will be free for students to attend, plans to temporarily operate out of the Lomie G. Heard facility while construction of the new permanent campus is built.

Prospective students will need to register for the new school before they can attend classes there. The Clark County School District Attendance Zone Advisory Committee has proposed rezoning current Lomie G. Heard students to attend Zel and Mary Lowman or J.E. Manch Elementary Schools just outside the Landings Gate on Craig Road. The school board will meet in February to finalize the proposal. Parents can have their children bused to one of these schools by CCSD or elect to have them attend a private school, homeschool, public charter, or magnet school of their choosing.

“This gives our military families more choices, and ultimately, more control,” said Carol Padilla, 99th Force Support Squadron school liaison officer. “This has been a lot of work for a lot of people, but I am excited about a new school.”

The new school is planning to accommodate 600 students from kindergarten through fifth grade in the existing Lomie G. Heard facility, but will expand to 800 students from kindergarten through eighth grade once the new facility is completed. CASLV also operates four other campuses in the Las Vegas Area.

Per recent changes in Nevada legislation, dependent children of DOD personnel will have priority in enrolling in the new school — active duty, then government employees. If there are not enough students from Nellis AFB personnel to fill the seats, the school will offer the remaining positions to non-DOD-affiliated students. If the non-DOD-affiliated students are accepted to the school, their parent(s) or guardian(s) will have to pass the standard background check to be granted base access.

“The leadership team here has taken into account many factors and concerns expressed by parents over the past few years and is working with CCSD and a contractor to put your children in the best position possible to continue receiving a high-quality education,” Boutwell said. “I’m thankful for everything the CCSD has provided our families and will continue to provide them as we transition in the upcoming months.

“While everything is moving along well, we are in the final negotiations for the long-term lease that will enable the new facility to be built,” Boutwell said.

The 99th ABW will be holding a school town hall meeting for parents and guardians at the Nellis Base Theater, Dec. 15 at 6:30 p.m. CASLV is planning to give a short presentation on what their program will offer.

Student registration for CASLV is now open and can be found at http://www.caslv.org/admission.

For more information about the charter school, please contact CASLV at 702-776-6529702-776-6529, extension 106 or visit their website at http://www.caslv.org. For more information about other schooling options, please contact the 99th FSS School Liaison Officer at 702-652-2156702-652-2156.

MORE INFORMATION ON CORAL SCIENCE ACADEMY, WE PREVIOUSLY DID A SHORT ARTICLE ON THEIR ATTEMPTED EXPANSION FEBRUARY 2015 WHICH WAS STOPPED BY THE SENIOR VILLAGE NEAR WHERE THEY WANTED TO MOVE.

Source: http://gulencharterschoolsusa.blogspot.com/2015/02/coral-science-academy-in-henderson.html

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: charter schools, clintons, Gulen, imam, Turkish

Turkish festival of Indoctrination of American Student in Texas by Turkish Imam Gulen movement

February 8, 2016 By administrator

Fethullah-Gulen-Incubator-4The ceremony was held at the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts in Houston, Texas, in front of 3,000 attendees. Some 100 students from 13 countries took to the stage during the event and nearly 2,500 students from 150 countries will take part across the globe in various ceremonies for this year’s festival.

Congressman Al Green and Pete Olson also attended the event as the Raindrop Foundation, which held the event, was awarded two certificates of merit on behalf of the state of Texas.

Delivering a speech at the event, Green said that wars could be ended together with the initiators of peace and the world could be turned into a safer place for future generations. Referring to “What a wonderful world,” one of the songs sang during the event, Green said the world is excellent because of the brilliant young people in it, adding that people can live in co-existence and bring peace to the world.

After his speech, Green called on Siwar Andolsi, a student from Tunisia, and gave a certificate of merit to him.

Another speaker, Olson, thanked the Turkish-American society for its contribution to multiculturalism with such an activity. He said it was a source of pride to host such an event and different cultures at the festival, which has given them a chance to express the pride they have felt.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: festival, Gulen, movement, texas, Turkish

When moderation masks a radical agenda, Turkish Imam Gulen Movement remains a threat to the US

January 24, 2016 By administrator

1_212016_b3-wagn-gulen-plan-8201_c1-0-2499-1457_s885x516The Gulen Movement remains a threat to the United States and Turkey

By Abraham R. Wagner – – Thursday, January 21, 2016

No one ever wants a Cosby moment, a moment when all of one’s suspected bad deeds are exposed to the world. Fettulah Gulen, the undisputable leader of the Gulen Movement was recently provided such a Cosby Moment, compliments of the FBI.

Mr. Gulen, a Muslim cleric from Turkey, with an elementary education only, is a mysterious fellow. In cables divulged by WikiLeaks, the U.S. Department of State described Mr. Gulen as “a ‘radical Islamist’ whose moderate message cloaks a more sinister and radical agenda.” He is reputed to be worth roughly $25 billion, although no one seems to know from where he earned this tidy sum. Most notably and despite the Department of State’s perspective, he espouses principles of tolerance and multiculturalism. Yet upon deeper investigation, he is a true, dyed-in-the-wool Islamist who wishes to transform the United States and Turkey into Shariah states.

Mr. Gulen lives in the United States in self-imposed exile, a seat from which he runs a vast and questionable network of charter schools and overlapping nonprofit organizations and businesses, and, as evidence presented in U.S. and Turkish courts shows, actively agitates and plots the overthrow of the democratically-elected government in Turkey, one of the few stable allies the United States possesses in the Middle East, a NATO-member and the lynchpin to defeating ISIS and to bringing peace to Iraq and Syria.

As the proprietor of the largest network of charter schools in the United States, Mr. Gulen receives hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars. Active investigations into the financial malfeasance of the Gulen schools are ongoing in Texas, Louisiana, Illinois, Ohio and other states, this, in addition to an active investigation by the FBI. According to state and local law enforcement reports, the Gulen Movement, in collusion with various nonprofit organizations and companies directly linked to the Gulen Movement, are playing a sort of shell game with taxpayer funds. Gulen schools pay high rental fees on properties owned by Mr. Gulen, construction and renovations of Gulen facilities are performed by Gulen businesses and vast sums are spent on facilitating the entry of young Turkish men to the United States.

These men, disciples all, are brought to the United States to replace qualified and credentialed American teachers and, allegedly, to proselytize American children into a Turkey-centric, Islamist movement — a sort of fifth-column seeking to infiltrate American society through children in an attempt to transform America, as in the case of Turkey, into a Shariah state. These men account for over 5,000 highly questionable H-1B visas, more than Google, who are suspected of indentured servitude to the Gulen Movement and thus investigated under anti-Human Trafficking statutes.

Mr. Gulen is embroiled in a law suit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania claiming that Mr. Gulen and his movement committed human rights violations against members of a rival political party in Turkey. The suit is seeking the extradition of Mr. Gulen to stand trial on these and other charges.

As in the United States, in Turkey the Gulen Movement is continually under investigation for engaging in a wide range of covert efforts to infiltrate all aspects of Turkey’s government, media and business, including law enforcement and the judiciary with the goal of thwarting constitutional order and the democratically elected government. Turkish prosecutors and police, manipulated by the Gulen Movement, have targeted senior military officers with false criminal charges, illegally tapped phones, and jailed secular journalists who have failed to follow a strict Islamic line.

Again, as in the United States, the Gulen Movement embeds itself into the educational infrastructure of Turkey, with its network of schools that radicalize children and turn them away from the ideals of modern Turkey — in much the same way that madrassas do in other nations.

Although the FBI and state and local law enforcement are ardently investigating the Gulen Movement’s vast charter school network for its fraud against the American taxpayers, the FBI, in specific, should expand and deepen its investigation to uncover the motives associated with young Turkish men teaching American children — namely the proselytization of American children to Islamist doctrine — when a glut of qualified and credentialed teachers exists.

From a geo-political standpoint, an expanded investigation will uncover what the U.S. Department of State already knows of Fettulah Gulen — that he is “a ‘radical Islamist’ whose moderate message cloaks a more sinister and radical agenda.” It will also likely go far to exposing Fettulah Gulen’s fomenting the overthrow of the Turkish government, which, if successful would move Turkey in a direction inimical to U.S. interests. Clearly, the United States doesn’t need a Gulenist regime ruling over this key NATO ally in a crucial part of the world.

• Abraham R. Wagner teaches national security law and intelligence at the Columbia Law School and Columbia Universitys School of International and Public Affairs, where he is a senior research fellow at the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies.

Source: washingtontimes.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gulen, imam, movement, Turkish

Canada, Turkish Imam Fethullah Gulen “Interfaith Scam” have now deeply infiltrated Canadian Political society

January 23, 2016 By administrator

Gulen in TorontoGulen Movement is using the same tactic as their forefather did when they infiltrated Islamic empire and hijack islam used as tools went on conquering three continent,  But the movement’s influence extends far beyond Turkey, funding schools, and think tanks and media outlets, from washington to Toronto from Kenya to Kazakhstan. It has attracted millions of followers and billions of dollars.

now that they have fully concurred United State political elite culture they are turning on Canadian political culture, by giving away award under name of  falsified interfaith dialogue scam,

Recently they have put up  hollywood style award giving show in Toronto, Canada, The award ceremony, which took place at Toronto’s Fairmont Royal York Hotel on Jan. 19, was attended by Lieutenant Governor of Ontario Elizabeth Dowdeswell, Toronto Mayor John Tory, Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie, as well as parliamentarians, academics and representatives of civil society groups.

Hizmet has no formal structure, no visible organisation and no official membership, yet it may have grown into the world’s biggest Muslim network.

There are said to be millions of Hizmet followers in Turkey, where they are believed to hold influential positions in institutions from the police and secret services to the judiciary and the AK Party itself.

A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing: video which surfaced in 1999, in which Mr Gulen seemed to tell his followers that they should deliberately attempt to infiltrate mainstream structures:
“You must move within the arteries of the system, without anyone noticing your existence, until you reach all the power centres.
“You must wait until such time as you have got all the state power, until you have brought to your side all the power of the constitutional institution in Turkey.”
The following year, Mr Gulen faced charges of trying to undermine Turkey’s secular state.
He left for the US, saying the recording had been tampered with. He was later cleared in absentia of all charges.
Several of Hizmet’s most prominent critics have been jailed in Turkey, sparking claims that it has become a sinister controlling force in its native land.
A police chief who wrote a book on Gulen’s influence on the police and judiciary was jailed, as were two Turkish investigative journalists.

Wikileaks shows growing concern among U. S. officials over Fethullah Gulen’s attempts to create a New Islamic World and the “braining washing of students” that takes place at his charter schools within the United States and throughout the Muslim world. 

They are flee to Canada from the USA.

Gulen Movement have donated Millions to Clinton campaign see: http://www.slideshare.net/GulenCemaat/gulen-movement-clinton-campagn-donors

 

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Gulen, scam, TORONTO

The FBI points to possible corruption at the Turkish Imam Gulen charter School network,

January 15, 2016 By administrator

9720578366_0ed14b2f53_b-1024x681A Jacobin investigation finds widespread corruption at one of the nation’s largest charter school networks.

by George Joseph

Over the summer, FBI agents stormed nineteen charter schools as part of an ongoing investigation into Concept Charter Schools. They raided the buildings seeking information about companies the prominent Midwestern charter operator had contracted with under the federal E-Rate program.

The federal investigation points to possible corruption at the Gulen charter network, with which Concept is affiliated and which takes its name from the Turkish cleric Fetullah Gulen. And a Jacobin investigation found that malfeasance in the Gulen network, the second largest in the country, is more widespread than previously thought. Federal contracting documents suggest that the conflict-of-interest transactions occurring at Concept are a routine practice at other Gulen-affiliated charter school operators.

The Jacobin probe into Gulen-affiliated operators in Texas, Arizona, Utah, Nevada, and California found that roughly $4 million in E-Rate contract disbursements and $1.7 million in Department of Education Race to the Top grantee awards were given to what appear to be “related parties.” Awarding contracts to firms headed by related parties would seem to violate the FCC’s requirement that the school’s bidding process be “competitive” as well as “open and fair.”

Unlike most charter schools networks, the Gulen charter network has received significant scrutiny in the US press, primarily because of the international profile of its Islamic cleric leader and xenophobic fears of “education jihad.” Such coverage distracts from what appears to be systemic corruption at the public’s expense, a predictable consequence of the US charter school model. This has nothing to do with Fetullah Gulen’s religious teaching and everything to do with the private management of public education dollars.

Like most big-time charter operators, the Gulen charter network has developed a growth model more reminiscent of a Fortune 500 company than a public school district. As the sociologist Joshua David Hendrick told Jacobin, the Gulen charter school movement links “private Turkish capital with a shared sub-economy that builds upon an initial educational venture and then expands from there.”

Armed with startup capital from Turkish foundations, the charter school network has quickly grown to over 130 schools in twenty-five states while employing the same business strategy: invest in lawmakers to win charter school contracts, import Gulen adherents to staff schools on H-1B teaching visas, and award school contracts to education resource firms led by former employees.

The cycle can then repeat itself as enriched former school employees donate to the plethora of Turkish foundations, securing political influence for individual charter school operators.

A Suspect Bidding Process 

Records indicate that Gulen charter schools nationwide may be regularly violating federal competitive-bidding laws by disbursing contracts and grants to firms owned by other Gulen schools or former Gulen school employees.

In August, the Chicago Sun Times reported that in Chicago alone Concept management may have engaged in nearly a million dollars worth of related-party transactions with E-rate contractor Core Group, Inc. An analysis of Core Group’s E-Rate program disbursement shows their only successful bids have come from Concept charter schools across the Midwest and that these fifty-eight bids amount to over $3.2 million.

More obviously suspect are the contracting deals sometimes crafted between Gulen chains. Apex Educational Services, for example, presents itself as a stand-alone education technology firm, but a 2013 IRS file from a Chandler, Arizona, branch of the Gulen-affiliated Sonoran Science Academy chain lists Apex Educational Services, Inc. as one of its properties.

Hence it is no surprise that nearly all of Apex’s forty-eight E-Rate bids have gone to Gulen-affiliated chains across California, Nevada, and Utah, and all four of Apex’s successful bids have come from Magnolia Science Academies, one of the country’s largest Gulen charter chains. To date, Apex has earned about $114,000 from Magnolia’s E-Rate disbursement.

Ties between other Gulen-affiliated chains and their E-Rate providers may also violate the FCC’s competitive-bidding requirements.

There appears to be an intimate relationship, for example, between Harmony Public Schools, a Gulen-affiliated Texas charter chain, and the telecommunications firm Brighten Technologies, which from 2010 to 2014 earned roughly $670,000 off of twenty-three Harmony’s E-Rate contracts. Set up and staffed by former Harmony computer-science teachers, Brighten Technologies exists almost exclusively for Harmony contracts (94 percent of Brighten Technologies’ E-Rate applications have been for Harmony Public Schools).

In an email to Jacobin, Harmony denied these practices constitute a conflict of interest, claiming that their contracting approach to federal grants is “fair and open.” Nonetheless, despite being unaware of their close relationship, the Universal Service Administrative Company — the independent agency responsible for reviewing E-Rate applications — has rejected thirteen of Harmony’s applications to contract with Brighten Technologies for failing to prove it had a competitive-bidding process.

Regarding their contracting with Brighten Technologies, Harmony officials wrote, “A range of factors, including price, product availability, and demonstrated ability to deliver are evaluated in selecting vendors, and all the criteria for ‘best value’ have to be met, not just low price.”

Such a response is telling; rather than simply explaining why no conflict of interest exists with Brighten, Harmony officials stressed twice to Jacobin that “low price” is not their only contracting criterion, a line they used to justify what appeared to be overly generous contracts to Turkish-owned construction firms three years ago.

Additionally, federal data does not support Harmony’s claim that Brighten Technologies offered any “better value” in lieu of its overcharging. In fact, most of Brighten’s applications were rejected for failing to provide basic planning standards. To date, only twenty-six of Brighten’s ninety-eight applications have been accepted. Had Brighten been competent enough to meet USAC’s basic requirements when applying for Harmony contracts, it could have netted well over $5 million from past applications alone.

But Harmony’s apparent competitive-bidding violations go beyond the E-Rate program. In February 2014, Harmony’s school newspaper announced that the Cosmos Foundation had secured a $29.8 million Race to the Top grant from the Department of Education to purchase Google Chromebooks for over 16,000 students.

Brighten Technologies received a roughly $905,000 Department of Education Race to the Top grant, secured for them by Harmony Public Schools — another potential federal violation of Race to the Top grant rules, which stipulate that recipients must foster “full and open competition” when contracting for goods and services.

Further analysis of the same Race to the Top grant shows that Harmony also awarded $805,000 in contracts to the Gulen-affiliated Texas Gulf Foundation for various consulting and instructional services. But as the New York Times reported in 2011, the foundation, like Brighten Technologies, was started by former Harmony employees and used to have its offices on a Harmony campus.

Harmony officials denied that this contract award violated competitive-bidding guidelines; Brighten Technologies has not returned Jacobin requests for comment.

Building Influence, Building Schools

Gulen-affiliated chains have grown most rapidly in the Midwest, Texas, Arizona, and California, where, as in Chicago, stories abound of Gulen-affiliated charter officials appealing to state authorities to override the contracting decisions of local school districts.

In Illinois and Texas, Gulen-linked Turkish cultural foundations have invited lawmakers on numerous trips to Turkey, and consistently fund the campaigns of those in a position to expand their fast-growing network. When the Chicago Public Schools declined Concept’s offer to build two more schools, for example, Concept appealed to the Illinois State Charter School Commission, an agency formed by Illinois Democratic Chairman Michael Madigan, among others. The commission overturned the school board’s decision and approved Concept’s expansion.

Madigan had taken four trips to Turkey that were hosted by the Niagara Foundation, whose honorary president is none other than Fetullah Gulen. From 2010-2012, the Niagara foundation paid for at least thirty-two sojourns for Illinois lawmakers.

In New Orleans, two members of the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education traveled to Turkey at the invitation of the Gulen-affiliated Pelican Foundation. The trips prompted local rumors of a quid pro quo when one of these members was the sole dissenting vote against revoking Pelican’s right to operate Abramson Science and Technology Charter School, despite shocking stories of alleged mishandling of sexual-abuse cases.

Similarly, the Houston-based Turquoise Council of Americans and Eurasians, which a Stratfor email leaked by Wikileaks described as “definitely a nonprofit related to the larger Fethullah Gulen movement,” has been called into question for its lavish trips for Texas lawmakers. Prominent members of the nonprofit have close ties to Harmony Public Schools, Texas’s largest charter chain, and its 2012 IRS 990 form alone lists nearly $1.9 million in travel expenses.

The founder of Harmony Public Schools, Yetkin Yildirim, is also the Austin branch representative of the Turquoise Council of Americans and Eurasians, a position from which he regularly lobbies local politicians.

And their influence may extend beyond their regional bases. On February 9, 2010, Kemal Oksuz, the president of the Turquoise Council, and Yildirim, the founder of Harmony Public Schools, both attended a White House “Briefing for Turkish American Leaders.” In a statement to Jacobin, Harmony Public Schools claimed to have no affiliation with the Turquoise Council of Americans and Eurasians and denied any connection to the Gulen movement, despite several investigative reports that have linked the two.

Additionally, Buzzfeed reported this summer on the tens of thousands of dollars that Gulen adherents were pouring into Texas races, particularly to that of US Representative Sheila Jackson Lee. School officials denied these donations were part of a centrally coordinated influence-building effort. Nonetheless, in July, Harmony CFO Erdal Caglar admitted that Jackson Lee was helping the chain expand to a location in DC.

Education or Immigration?

Despite the financial success of many Gulen schools, several sites have driven themselves to bankruptcy, spending enormous amounts of public funding on immigration fees for fellow Gulenists. As the Atlantic recently reported, Utah’s Beehive Academy, a Gulen school, spent “about 50 cents to pay the immigration costs of foreign teachers for every dollar that it spent on textbooks.” This eventually caused the school to be temporarily shuttered.

In California, Magnolia Science Academies, a Gulen-affiliated chain, recently made headlines for allegedly misusing $3 million in public funds to cover the immigration costs of six non-employees. The Los Angeles Unified School District ordered the closure of two Magnolia schools, citing financial mismanagement, but a July court order reversed the decision.

For Gulen, it goes beyond financial impropriety. Gulen chains appear to use H-1B slots for teaching positions to facilitate immigration and further business expansion, rather than to improve teaching quality. According to Canadian consular officials, teachers being brought from Turkey to teach in Gulen schools on H-1B visas are often not credentialed. “While the H-1B petitions were for teaching positions at charter schools in the United States,” wrote one Canadian official, “most applicants had no prior teaching experience and the schools were listed as related to Fethullah Gulen.”

Records indicate that from 2001–10, Cosmos Foundation, the charter operator of Texas’s Harmony Public Schools, filed 1,157 H-1B visa applications and brought in 731 employees — higher than all other providers of secondary education combined.

In a statement to Jacobin, Harmony officials explained “the national shortage of math and science teachers” had pushed them to hire a “small percentage of international teachers” whose qualifications were “based primarily on academic professional credentials.”

The story of Brighten Technologies, the telecommunications provider closely linked to Harmony, illustrates how Gulen schools use H-1B visas not only to guarantee American residency to fellow Gulen adherents, but also to create in-house companies to profit off of federal and state grants.

Take Joseph Duzgun, the founder of Brighten Technologies, who came to the states sometime around 2002. According to his LinkedIn page, Duzgun studied mathematics at Ondokuz Mayis University in Samsun, Turkey, though his profile does not include any information regarding teacher training.

Nevertheless, Duzgun served a short teaching stint at Harmony Schools from as early as 2004 to at least 2006. Two years later, he started Brighten Technology Solutions (later called Brighten Technologies), which has benefitted from numerous publicly financed contracts from his former employer, Harmony Public Schools.

Likewise, Turkish immigrant Gökhan Sancar was a computer teacher and technology instructor at Harmony Science Academy Lubbock from 2008–9 and at the Harmony School of Ingenuity from 2009–10. He joined Brighten Technology Solutions in 2010. He currently lists his position as Brighten’s VP of Sales. Neither Duzgun nor Sancar responded to Jacobin requests for comment.

Brighten Technologies exemplifies the Gulenist corporate expansion strategy. School officials bring over fellow Gulenists on H-1B teaching visas, keep them in Harmony schools for a few years, then organize them to found companies — which are guaranteed a profit from providing services to Gulen schools, often at inflated costs.

A Charter to Steal

Harmony’s E-Rate and Race to the Top programs federal grants have netted Brighten Technologies over $1.57 million in dubiously legal related-party transactions. Such transactions appear to violate many federal grant application rules, and also occur at the state level, where such nepotistic practices are often even more difficult to regulate.

In Texas, where Harmony has quickly grown to become the largest charter school chain, nine regulators oversee the operations of 671 charter school campuses — a number that hasn’t changed since 2011, according to Texas Education Agency spokesperson DeEtta Culbertson. This regulatory force is so inadequate that in 2011, even Greg Richmond, president of the National Association of Charter School Authorizers, admitted, “They don’t have the capacity at the state level to do the job.”

From 2009–11, Harmony awarded thirty-five contracts worth a total of $82 million to Turkish construction firms with close links to school officials. Despite offering substantially lower bids for the same jobs, competitor firms were shocked to find out they’d lost.

Investigation into Harmony Public Schools’ contracting practices from 2009-2013 indicates that tens of millions in public dollars have continued to flow to closely associated Turkish firms. Since 2009, TDM Construction has brought home over $45 million, Solidarity Construction over $45 million, and Atlas Construction over $3 million, totaling well over $95 million from Harmony contracts alone.

To finance their massive construction projects, Harmony Public Schools has also issued hundreds of millions in bonds, which will rely heavily on public financing to pay off. A 2012 New York Times report, for example, found that Harmony has been granted $200 million in bonds since 2007, making it Texas’ largest charter school bond issuer by far. Last July, the city of Houston alone issued Harmony a $101,555,000 bond to build two more schools, renovate four existing ones, and refinance some of Harmony’s existing debt.

Harmony’s plan to finance their overall debts is projected to cost nearly half a billion dollars over the course of twenty-nine years, a plan which could come back to haunt taxpayers, given that in the last five years the Texas Education Agency has shut down eleven Harmony schools. And unfortunately for the people of Texas, the state’s permanent school fund will guarantee the principal and interest of these bonds, thus exposing Texas higher education funding to considerable risk.

While these sweetheart deals, guaranteed windfalls, and potential financial collapses are troubling, they are endemic to the charter school movement nationwide. The widespread corruption at Gulen charter schools is not due to the religion of Gulen charter school executives, but rather because doling out millions in public funding to private education operators with little to no oversight protects and encourages such fraudulent practices.

Indeed, despite the FBI raids this summer, Chicago’s Board of Education authorized Concept to expand to two more sites just one month later.

The move came as a shock to many Chicagoans, still recovering from the Chicago Board of Education’s historic move to shut down fifty schools last year, mostly in working-class black and Latino neighborhoods. As Chicago NBC reporter Mark Anderson lamented, “a federal raid on a company doesn’t seem to mean much anymore, especially if that firm is a politically connected charter school operator ready to take millions in taxpayer dollars to stay in business.”

The contracting practices of Gulen-affiliated charter schools appear to be not just nepotistic, but illegal. Such corruption, however, must not be ascribed to the ideologies of the Gulen movement, but rather to the structure of the charter school sector, which it has successfully gamed.

In addition, the Gulen expansion strategy should be viewed not as an outlier within the charter school movement, but as its most successful example. Gulen foundations invest in politicians to win charter contracts, and use the resulting public funding to import Gulen adherents on H-1B teaching visas. Though these employees do not necessarily have teaching credentials, they are often qualified to form education resource firms, which consistently earn generous contracts from Gulen schools across the country. The cycle then expands as employees of these firms give back to the very foundations that initiated the process.

It’s a process that enriches private actors and hurts students. But as long as US lawmakers push for private control over public education, the corruption and public plunder that Gulen schools exemplify will only continue.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: charter, FBI, Gulen, school

Turkey Issues Arrest Warrants for Oppositionist Fethullah Gulen’s Movement

December 28, 2015 By administrator

Terror in Turkey/gagrulenet

Terror in Turkey/gagrulenet

Turkish authorities reportedly have issued arrest warrants for 61 people in the so-called “parallel state” including prominent Turkish oppositionist Fethullah Gulen.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) — Turkish authorities have issued arrest warrants for 61 people in the so-called “parallel state,” or, as Ankara calls it, the Gulenist Terror Organization case, including prominent Turkish oppositionist Fethullah Gulen, local media reported Monday.

Gulen, who lives in the United States, is accused of conspiring against the Turkish state and wiretapping thousands of people, including Ankara officials, Daily Sabah reported.

In 2014, Turkey opened an investigation into the “parallel state” organization for allegedly seeking to overthrow the government, headed by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Ankara considers the Gulen Movement a threat to national security. An outspoken critic of the president, Gulen faces numerous charges including treason and extradition at home. Gulen has denied all the accusations.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, Gulen, Turkey

US court gives Gülen 21 days to present his defense

December 14, 2015 By administrator

CİHAN photo

CİHAN photo

The extradition of U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen was “unofficially” demanded in a civil suit filed last week by lawyers hired by the Turkish government, while a judge who accepted the appeal has given Gülen 21 days to respond to accusations filed against him.

The lawsuit cited three citizens of the Republic of Turkey as plaintiffs who say they have been victimized by the Gülen Movement. Although it hired the lawyers of the case, the Turkish government is not named as a plaintiff in the suit, which was filed on Dec. 7 at a district court in Pennsylvania.

Gülen was one a close ally of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, but relations have soured in recent years.

In order for an extradition to take place, the subject of the case must have committed a crime.

“This lawsuit will display that the Gülen Movement does not have immunity in the U.S.,” Robert Amsterdam, the founder of U.K.-based firm Amsterdam and Partners LLP which filed the suit, told Hürriyet.

Amsterdam and Partners LLP filed the suit along with Pennsylvania-based law firm Fox Rothschild LLP, as Gülen has lived in Pennsylvania since 1999. In statement to Hürriyet, Amsterdam underlined that their appeal was not linked to a separate request for extradition said to have been filed by the Turkish government.

According to information obtained by Hürriyet, Judge Robert Mariani, having put Amsterdam’s petition in process with file number “3:15−CV−02354−RDM” also wrote a document addressed to Gülen on Dec. 7, asking him to respond to the allegations within 21 days.

In a separate document dated Dec. 9 and sent to the attorneys of the complainants, Mariani announced that he would hold a meeting concerning the file within four months.

The eighth article of the petition asking for a jury trial refers to an “unofficial request by the Turkish government for Gülen’s extradition.”

“Mr. Gülen has since been formally charged in Turkey with infiltrating key state institutions in order to overthrow the lawfully elected government. The Government of Turkey has informally requested his extradition to Turkey to stand trial, although Mr. Gülen presently remains in the United States and is residing within this jurisdiction,” said the petition.

When asked whether his company was involved in any stage of the Turkish government’s request for extradition of Gülen, Amsterdam declined to elaborate and briefly said: “The extradition issue is a matter between the governments.”

“My client is the Turkish government but we are defending three victims aggrieved by the Gülen Movement,” he also said, while not making clear whether they were being paid any fee by those three Turkish citizens.

In line with the principle of privacy, the U.S. administration doesn’t make any comments on cases of extradition. However, a U.S. official who previously spoke to Hürriyet on the issue said no application had yet been made at the Department of Justice.

“The main counterpart on this issue is the Justice Department. So far, no official application has been filed to the Justice department. The U.S. Justice Department will look into what can be done when Turkey files its official application, along with documents,” the official said.

The same U.S. official had stressed that Gülen’s involvement in a crime must be proven by a U.S. court in order for his extradition to be possible.

Amsterdam and Partners LLP, meanwhile, stated that its “efforts are both a legal struggle against the Gülen Movement and a political struggle and investigation at the same time. We will present a report about preliminary results of our efforts either in March or April.”

It said accusations against Gülen go beyond the subject of the lawsuit filed, as they include “human smuggling, tax fraud and violation of the migration law.”

The claims against Gülen have been filed under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS), an 18th century law that has been used to try human rights cases from around the world in U.S. courts.

In 2006, Charles “Chuckie” Taylor Jr., the son of Charles Taylor, the former President of Liberia, who was commander of the infamously violent Anti-Terrorist Unit during his father’s presidency, was sentenced for torturing five people in Liberia in a civil suit filed on behalf of five victims pursuant to the ATS.

December/14/2015

Source: hurriyetdailynews

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gulen, Turkey, US

Turkey: a new conglomerate near the Imam Gülen made ​​a ward of court

November 20, 2015 By administrator

arton118864-320x160The Turkish judicial authorities under guardianship a new business conglomerate close to the imam Fethullah Gülen, sworn enemy of the Islamic-conservative President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Wednesday the local media.

Escorted by riot police, new directors arrived Wednesday at the headquarters of Kaynak Holding in the district of Üsküdar on the Asian side of Istanbul, said the Dogan news agency.

Turkish justice group suspected of financing the organization of Imam Gülen, Turkish authorities considered by a terrorist organization.

Founded in 1983 by the entourage of Mr. Gülen, Kaynak Holding brings together fifteen companies in the distribution sector, IT, construction and food processing. Its main branch, the Kaynak Publishing Group, brings together 28 publishing houses that publish books of the preacher.

Former ally of Mr. Erdogan, Mr. Gulen, who lives in the United States since 1999, became a “public enemy number 1” from the corruption scandal that shook the government and the entourage of the strong man of the country end of 2013.

The head of state accused the preacher of wanting to topple what it denies.

For nearly two years, the Turkish authorities have stepped purges and prosecutions against the relatives of the Gülen nebula and its financial interests.

After the tenth banking network in the country, Bank Asya, Turkey’s justice last month took control of Koza-Ipek the holding, including the owner of two newspapers and two television channels, in a spectacular police raid denounced as a violation of freedom of the press in Turkey and abroad.

In power for thirteen years, the Erdogan’s party won handily legislative November 1 in Turkey and regained the absolute majority of seats in Parliament lost there are only five months.

It reaffirmed its commitment to end Mr. Gülen, to be tried in absentia in Turkey in January for “attempted coup”.

Friday, November 20, 2015,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gulen, imam, Turkey

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