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34 Years After the Turkish Invasion

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  • 34 Years After the Turkish Invasion

    34 YEARS AFTER THE TURKISH INVASION
    Alexander-Michael Hadjilyra - [email protected]

    Gibrahayer - July 08

    Writing this article has been particularly taxing for me, not just
    because of the sizzling summer temperatures and the various articles I
    must finish writing soon, but mainly because it will once again remind
    me of the ongoing drama that Cyprus has been enduring for 34 years now,
    ever since the barbarous Turkish mehmetçik unlawfully invaded the sweet
    land of Cyprus, marking its history forever.

    A small historical account is in order: on 16 August 1960 Cyprus had
    finally become an Independent Republic; although this was celebrated
    throughout the island, there was some unrest amongst the residents of
    Cyprus: the Greek-Cypriots viewed Independence as an interim to Enosis,
    the Turkish-Cypriots considered it a relief from the possibility of a
    union with Greece, while the Armenians, the Latins and the Maronites
    were worried as to how the Greek-Cypriots would treat them in this
    newly-founded state, whose Constitution was labelled as `given'. This
    fragile partnership that gave the 18% Turkish-Cypriot minority
    super-rights, with 30% government participation and 40% Army and Police
    participation, along with a Vice-President with the right to veto, 3
    out of the 10 Ministers and 15 out of the 50 Members of the Parliament,
    was not meant to last long.

    After an escalating sequence of events, inter-communal violence bro
    ke
    out in the early hours of 21 December 1963. By midday, the
    Vice-President, the 3 T/C ministers, the 15 T/C MPs and all T/C
    government employees and policemen had left their posts, and soon after
    they took over the northern parts of Nicosia centre ` amongst them
    Karaman Zade and Neapolis, thus evicting 231 Armenian families from
    their ancient quarter, and depriving them of their mediaeval Church of
    Sourp Asdvadzadzin and the Melikian-Ouzounian Primary School. Within
    Nicosia, a green line was established on 30 December 1963, separating
    the G/C from the T/C, thus laying the foundations for further
    partition.

    The years went by, with many breathtaking events that led Cyprus more
    than once on the brink of a war with Turkey. However, with the
    exception of the Aghirda pocket (stretching from Nicosia till the
    outskirts of Kyrenia), life went on peacefully, although not without
    tension. The scheming and manoeuvring of the Greek military junta
    (which, at the time, controlled the National Guard), the United States
    and the United Kingdom, led to the unlawful coup d' état against the
    elected president, Archbishop Makarios III, at 08:20, on Monday, 15
    July 1974. At the time the tanks were attacking the Presidential
    Palace, president Makarios was touring a group of schoolchildren from
    Egypt. Soon after Makarios escaped towards Kykko Monastery, the
    perpetrators announced that he was dead, and they installed a scapegoat =0
    D
    as their puppet `president', Nicos Sampson.

    The cowardly coup was the beginning of the end: however
    non-meritocratic and person-centred Makarios' administration might have
    been, his controversial presence was a bulwark against all Turkish
    usurpations, a stronghold against any military intervention on Cyprus.
    With Makarios out of the picture, Turkey had found the ideal pretext to
    invade our beloved Cyprus: the `protection' of the Turkish-Cypriots.

    At around 5:30 a.m. of 20 July 1974, numerous Turkish troops landed at
    Five Mile point off Kyrenia, and parachutists are thrown in Aghirda
    pocket. Turkish aircrafts bombed Pentadaktylos range and Paphos forest,
    and within two days they had reached Kyrenia; although a cease-fire was
    agreed on the 22nd July, the Turkish troops continued their onward
    march until the 8th August, occupying about 3,95% of the total area of
    Cyprus, home to around 40.000 people. Thanks to the military resistance
    of the National Guard and ELDYK (the Greek contingent in Cyprus, at the
    time based to the west of the Race Course), the Attila troops were
    unable to capture significant parts of Nicosia centre and its
    outskirts, while the heroic resistance of the UNFICYP troops, aided by
    the National Guard, managed to prevent the Turks from capturing Nicosia
    International Airport.

    A few days later, on Wednesday, 14 August, Turkey once again invaded
    Cyprus, with full throttle. Nicosia, Famagusta
    and numerous villages
    were being bombed and tens of thousands of refugees fled to Larnaca and
    Troödos. By the time the cease-fire was signed at 18:00, on 16 August
    1974, around 33,45% of Cyprus had been occupied. Even after the
    cease-fire, the Turks continued to occupy small parts of Cyprus until
    the end of September 1974, reaching till the northern boundaries of
    Dhekelia SBA, and seizing the Louroujina salient (thus controlling the
    Nicosia-Larnaca motorway), the Petra-Angolemi-Galini area, the prolific
    copper mines of Mavrovouni and Apliki Lefka, as well retaining the
    strategic Kokkina pocket, which is not adjacent to the occupied areas.

    The outcome of the Turkish invasion was devastating: 142.000 G/C and
    2.500 Maronite refugees, 20.000 enclaved in the north (of which only
    485 remain today), 3.500 killed, and about 1.600 missing. About 34,85%
    of the total area of Cyprus (3.224 Km²), i.e. 188 villages, 39
    settlements and 10 Municipalities had been occupied, along with parts
    of Nicosia and Ayios Dhometios. Over the years, Turkey keeps a steady
    presence of 43.000 Turkish soldiers and 120.000 settlers from Anatolia,
    while the cultural damage done simply defies any quantification;
    suffice to say that out of the 677 occupied churches and monasteries, a
    fair number has been desecrated and/or turned into mosques, barracks or
    barns. Moreover, the pseudo-state - installed by Turkey, and recognised
    only by Turkey and Pakistan - has ill
    egally and unfoundedly altered the
    names of almost all occupied towns and villages and of about 21.150
    microtopyms.



    Today, 34 years from that dreadful summer, Cyprus is a much different
    place: after the opening of a small number of crossing points between
    the two sides, occupied Cyprus is no longer fully inaccessible, save
    for numerous military retained areas scattered all over it. We can now
    peacefully visit our occupied lands, see our beloved houses occupied by
    T/C or Turkish settlers, and we can watch our beautiful villages decay
    in the passage of time, since their illegal residents are not bothered
    to attend to them. On certain occasions we can even hold masses in some
    churches (only if you are Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Maronite or
    Anglican; Armenian Orthodox do not enjoy this `privilege').Apart from
    that, we serve the National Guard for 25 months and, as reservists, a
    few times a year until the age of 50, while UNFICYP maintains its
    presence for over 44 years now; the buffer zone, an area of 242 Km²
    stretching across the island between the two sides, is UNFICYP's realm.
    Yet, the most disturbing of all, although somehow inescapable and
    inevitable, is that our political leaders participate in talks about
    the solution of the Cyprus problem on the basis of a bi-zonal,
    bi-communal federation, the meaning of which was only made known to the
    general public just a few years ago,
    on the event of the infamous Annan
    Plan. Incidentally (?), the referendum was held on 24 April 2004.


    While most of our politicians seem to have reached to a consensus that
    a federation is supposedly «the only possible outcome of the talks,
    based on the UN Security Council resolutions», none of them has had the
    decency to inform us about its history as a solution to the Cyprus
    conundrum. A bi-zonal, bi-communal federation is in essence Turkey's
    second option to taksim (division). It was originally agreed upon in
    1977, between Makarios and Denktash, at a time that a substantial
    number of Greek-Cypriots and Maronites continued to reside in the
    occupied part of Cyprus, under serious threats for their lives; what is
    more, we know that Makarios was vehemently against any form of
    geographical federation and, considering his character, it was most
    probably another manifestation of his cunningness, since he knew it was
    inapplicable at the time.However, Makarios died soon afterwards, and in
    the meantime most of the G/C and Maronite enclaved sought shelter to
    the government-controlled areas, while at the same time the Muslim
    population rapidly increased, with the influx of Turkish settlers from
    Anatolia. Considering the birth rates of the free and of the occupied
    areas of Cyprus, and the non-stopping arrival of the illegal and
    uncivilised settlers, the day that the Muslim population will outnumber
    the Christians may not=2
    0be very long from now.




    But it is not just the nature of the possible solution that bothers me;
    other matters cause me and many other Cypriots a great deal of distress
    and distrust towards the Turkish side. To begin with, the memories are
    still fresh from the brutal murdering of Tassos Isaac and the coward
    killing of Solomos Solomou, in August 1996 by Turkish-Cypriots and
    Turkish settlers, when they tried to enter the Turkish-occupied areas
    of Famagusta, while the clandestine cold-blooded assassination of
    Theophilos Georgiades, outside his Nicosia house in July 1994, still
    haunts many Cypriots up to this day.

    Another sign of Ankara's implacability is the Varosha issue: Varosha
    was not included in `operation Attila'; the only reason it was taken by
    the Turks is because its inhabitants, fearing for their lives,
    abandoned it. The Turks also occupied Ayios Memnon and Kato Dherynia,
    and they would have taken Dherynia too had there not been for a few
    armed G/C soldiers that thought it prudent to fire a few shots to make
    their presence known to the invaders.

    The Varosha area has been fenced for 34 years now, with its buildings
    having fallen into disuse and severe decay due to lack of maintenance
    and the exposure to the elements. For 34 years now the Turks have been
    toying with us that if we do this and that they may consider giving
    Varosha back, but for 34 years now not a
    single square foot has been
    given back to us. On the contrary, in 2000 they advanced to Strovilia
    area. What could possibly make us think they would ever be willing to
    give something back?

    And finally, what is even more disturbing is that when one decides to
    walk over to the other side, all their wishful thinking is
    disillusioned for good: for starters, not only must we show our
    passport/I.D., but we are also subject to the ridiculous procedure of
    having to write down our information onto a photocopied piece of paper,
    which is stamped as a `visa' for entering the so-called `Turkish
    Republic of Northern Cyprus'. This process is entirely unnecessary, and
    it is carried out purely to show us that there is a `state' in the
    occupied part of Cyprus, which we must respect. The lack of necessity
    for this time-consuming procedure (whose direct result is the formation
    of queues in front of the pseudo-police cubicles) is revealed when one
    loses their paper `visa': since they are already registered in the
    pseudo-police computer system, no harm done.

    After we enter the occupied areas, we experience the vast antithesis
    between the free Cyprus and the occupied Cyprus: the majority of the
    Turkish settlers and T/C live in derelict houses, often devoid of
    furniture we consider to be essential, and the whole ambiance transfers
    you back in time. Not just that, if we venture to go
    just 200 m. away
    from the main streets, we find ourselves in a land of an almost
    deafening silence and isolation. Not to mention the eerie and backward
    settlers with their weird manners, their many wives and their veils,
    and the fact that they speak only Turkish. How are we supposed to live
    together with these people, with whom we have nothing in common?

    Nevertheless, we must continue to fight for the rights of the people of
    Cyprus, and hope for a better future, in a united Cyprus (sic).
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