Movement Against Nationalism
Following the Greek Cypriot Rejection of the UN Proposal
April 25, 2004
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Press Release
Following the rejection on 24 April 2004 of the Annan proposal
by the majority of the Greek Cypriot community of the island of Cyprus,
the Greek Movement against Nationalism feels that it must state its
position on two issues: the security of the Turkish Cypriots and the
lifting of the sanctions currently in force against them.
It is not the case that the Cypriot issue affects only the Greek or
the Turkish Cypriot communities; we must remember that in both 1963
and 1974 Greece and Turkey found themselves on the brink of war over
the same issue. The issue is of vital importance - given the political
history of the island in the relatively recent past - to all those who
seek peace, and to every responsible and decent Greek, Turkish or European
citizen.
Opinion polls published earlier this year have demonstrated that some
33% of the Greek Cypriot community are not prepared to live peacefully
and on equal terms with their Turkish neighbours. It would seem that
feelings have changed little over the last 42 years: let us cite an
extract from a speech delivered on 4 September 1962 by Archbishop Makarios
in the village of Panayia: 'until this small Turkish community has
been expelled - these representatives of the Turkish race, the dread
enemy
of all things Greek - then the work of the heroes of EOKA cannot
be regarded as complete'.
The sworn enemy of the Turks, the fanatical nationalist churchman Makarios,
attempted in 1963 to remove from the Cypriot constitution, without democratic
mandate, thirteen articles which protected the rights of the island's
Turkish minority. He set in motion the infamous Akritas plan, making
use of three Greek Cypriot paramilitary organisations, their members heroes of EOKA, their leaders Lyssaridis, Georgatzis and Sampson.
We should remind the reader that one of these heroes of EOKA was none
other than Lyssaridis, former personal physician to Makarios and now
leader of a Greek Cypriot political party and one of the main moving
forces behind yesterday's vote to reject the UN proposal.
After the failure of the Akritas plan, Lyssaridis and his accomplices
resorted to the attempted genocide of the Turkish Cypriot civilian population.
Classic examples of their tactics were seen in Omorfita, the suburb
of Nicosia, with its 5,000 inhabitants of Turkish descent, and the village
of Koumsal, Ammochostos. At Omorfita the executioners seized 157 Turks
and transported them to Nicosia, where they were murdered. At Koumsal
the horrific murder was perpetrated - in the family bathroom - of the
three children and wife of the physician to the Turkish army corps on
Cyprus, Major Ilhan.
After the failure of the attempted ethnic cleansing of the Turkish
Cypriot population, the Greek Cypriot government confined the entire
Turkish Cypriot community, for eleven years - from 1963 to 1974, within
four large enclaves, representing just 4.3% of the surface of the island.
During this period the Turkish civilian population was subjected to
the most abject misery, deprived of the basic essentials of life, because
of the sanctions imposed by the government of the nationalist zealot
Makarios.
As if the Turkish Cypriots had not suffered enough over the eleven
years imprisoned in their ghettos, in 1974 new misfortunes began: this
was the year in which the Greek colonels staged their coup d'etat on
the island, attempting to assassinate Makarios and appointing the notorious
Sampson as president. Sampson made a radio broadcast in which he announced
his intention to execute Makarios and drive the Turkish Cypriots into
the sea, despite the fact that they remained imprisoned at the time
within their four large enclaves. The intervention of Turkey, as one
of the guaranteeing powers, brought an end to the sanctions imposed
on the four enclaves and allowed the Turkish population to move to the
northern part of the island, where they were safer from the deadly menace
of the Greek Cypriot nationalists. But the hardships of sanctions did
not end here for the Turkish Cypriots; they were now living in the northern
part of the island, which was not recognised by any state except Turkey
herself. The result of this isolation is that since 1963 the Turkish
Cypriots have had no passports, and no freedom to engage in direct trade
with the rest of the world. The sanctions also mean that they have no
right to establish direct air links with the outside world and cannot
therefore develop their tourist industry. The main reason why the Turkish
Cypriots have voted in favour of the UN proposal is that they wish,
at long last, to see an end to the sanctions imposed on them over the
last 41 years by the Greek Cypriot nationalists.
Declaration by the Greek Movement against Nationalism
The European Union has no right to continue the inhuman embargo which
has oppressed the unfortunate Turkish Cypriots for the last 43 years;
The only people who wish the sanctions to remain in force are the Greek
Cypriot nationalists, who have expressed their wish in their rejection
of the UN plan.
It is the duty of the European Union, and of the whole civilised world,
to free the Turkish Cypriots from the inhuman social and economic isolation
imposed on them by the Greek Cypriot nationalists. Their release must
be achieved in whatever manner it takes, even if it requires recognising
the Turkish Cypriot Republic of Northern Cyprus as a full member of
the European Union.
Note: The
photograph shows the armed Greek Cypriot hero, Sampson, in
1963, leading a triumphal procession into Nicosia of Turkish
infants, women
and old people from Omorfita - an act for which he was hailed
by the Greek Cypriot press - to their lasting shame - as a
hero and the liberator
of Omorfita.
We cannot say whether Lyssaridis, the only surviving
figure from the shadowy world of paramilitary politics at
that time, was similarly acclaimed.
ΑΝΤΙΕΘΝΙΚΙΣΤΙΚΗ ΚΙΝΗΣΗ
Ταχυδρομική Διεύθυνση: Τ.Θ 13794 10310 Αθήνα
E-mail: Antiethnikistiki@wxs.nl
Ιστοσελίδα: www.sitemaker.gr/antiethnikistik
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