The Canadian Association of University Teachers has joined higher education networks and associations from around the world in issuing a joint public letter expressing grave concern over recent reports of widespread pressures on members of Turkey’s higher education and research community.
The letter responds to reports that Turkish federal prosecutors have placed under investigation approximately 1,128 scholars, in an apparent retaliation for their co-signing a public petition urging Turkish authorities to renew dialogue with factions in the southeastern area of the country. The letter notes that some of the scholars have already been investigated for and/or charged with criminal offenses including spreading “terrorist propaganda,” “inciting people to hatred, violence and breaking the law,” and “insulting Turkish institutions and the Turkish Republic.” Dozens of scholars have reportedly already been detained and interrogated, and suspended or forced to resign from their positions at Turkish higher education institutions.
“Actions reportedly taken against these scholars raise serious concerns not only for [the scholars’] professional and personal well-being, but for the overall well-being of the Turkish higher education and research community, and for the ability of intellectuals and institutions in Turkey to undertake world-class scholarship,” the letter states.
The signatory organizations, including CAUT, call on Turkish authorities to intervene before any further harm is done to the scholars, their institutions, and to the reputation of Turkey’s higher education and research sector.
“It is important that the academic community in Canada join in international solidarity with colleagues in the Turkish higher education and research sector in the face of this unprecedented threat to academic freedom and basic civil liberties,” said CAUT executive director David Robinson.
The signatories hope that the letter will encourage Turkish officials to end any pending legal, administrative or professional actions undertaken against the scholars concerned and to renew publicly their commitment to internationally recognized principles of academic freedom, freedom of expression and freedom of association.