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Cyprus Essay Research Paper Billy TourtoulisBeth Hadrell (стр. 2 из 2)

In December 1963, Turkey showed openly that they wanted partition of Cyprus. T.M.T., the Turkish terrorist organization in Cyprus, began a rebellion against the government.(The Cyprus Problem 10) Turkey itself threatened invasion. To justify these actions, Turkey claimed that the suggested amendments of Archbishop Makarios were threatening to the Turkish Cypriot minority. That same month all of the Turkish Cypriot members of the government stepped down and proclaimed the constitution dead. Immediately the Turkish troops that were stationed in Cyprus according to the treaty began to move the Turkish Cypriot population with force.(Paidoussi) They claimed that it was done because the government of Cyprus was going to destroy them. All it did was geographically separate the populations so the plan for partition could proceed.

In January 1964, the British called for a conference in London to try to bring a solution to this new violence. The conference appeared to be a smoke screen for Turkey’s plan with the help of British power. There were two issues being forced on the government of Cyprus. First they had to allow troop from various countries to maintain law and order on the island and the establishment of an intergovernmental committee to control the troops.(The Cyprus Problem 11) The Greek Cypriots opposed all plans and brought the issue to the U.N. Turkey not wishing U.N. interference, used the threat of invasion thus hoping to keep discussing the issue in London. In August, 1964 one hundred Greek Cypriots were killed after bombing by Turkish jets.(Paidoussi ) “The Turkish Cypriots held 30% of the posts in the Civil Service and compromised 40% of the police force and army.”(The Cyprus Problem 7)

In March, 1964 the U.N. passed Security Council passed Security Council resolution 186 that sent a peace keeping force to the island.(The Cyprus Problem 12) Another resolution was passed in December 1965 that said that all other countries respect and recognize Cyprus’s independence and it continued the previous resolution to keep the peace troops on the island of Cyprus. After that talks were recommended by the UN Secretary General. The talks lasted 10 years and it looked as if Turkey could finally give in and agree with a single state of Cyprus.(Paidoussi) By 1974, though all those plans were dead. After the election in Turkey that year, Premier Bulent Ecevit signed a policy that only federation in Cyprus could be accepted.(The Cyprus Problem 15) Turkey now publicly showed they wanted the island to be separated. They were just waiting for their chance.

On July 15 1974 the top generals on the Greek Cypriot side overthrew their own government at the request of a military Junta in Athens (1967-1974) and President Makarios went into exile.(Paidoussi) Five days later 40,000 Turkish troops landed on the island against the constitution and the UN resolutions. A second invasion by Turkey followed on the 14th of August. The final result was that about 40% of the island came under Turkish control.(The Cyprus Problem 15) Prior to this the two populations lived together and were not polarized. Thousands of Greek Cypriots including civilians were killed or tortured and a lot more disappeared and are still missing because to this day Turkey refuses to acknowledge the problem.(Paidoussi)

In November that year the UN passed another resolution asking again respect for the independence of Cyprus and for the removal of all foreign troops, the end of all foreign interference and the return of all the refugees. Turkey voted for this resolution because otherwise Turkey would have been the only member of the Security Council to vote negative. However they refused to follow any of its resolutions. On February 10, 1975 the Greek Cypriot side made a proposal to Turkey based on the newest resolution. The plan called for the island of Cyprus united without any artificial division. Three days later Turkey responded by establishing the “Turkish Federated State of Cyprus.”(The Cyprus Problem 16) More resolutions were passed but Turkey ignored them all, much to the despair of all other nations.

All solutions to the problem in Cyprus have failed. Turkey has not been pressured enough to leave. To this day Turkey shoves and pushes the remaining Greek Cypriots from villages and home and settling Turks from the mainland. Since 1974 in the occupied area about 85,000 settlers from Turkey have made their home while the Greek Cypriot population has fallen 99% while the Turkish population has increased 150%.(The Refugees of Cyprus 5) The mainland of Turkey considers the occupied territory as part of Turkey.

It is amazing how a foreign policy can distort and misrepresent historical facts.

To name a few: There are hundreds of UN resolutions concerning the Israeli-Arab bloody 50 years since the establishment of the State of Israel. Israel has not complied and the U.S. has either vetoed said resolutions, or turned the other way. In Cyprus, the resolutions go unobserved by the Turkish government and the U.S. turns a deaf ear. However when Kuwait shouted help in 1990, and the UN ordered troops, the whole world listened and obeyed; one of the first on the scene with the billion dollar stealth bombers was the United States. Yet, Kuwait was once part of Iraq and the same foreign policy of the British separated it into another country.(Paidoussi) Kuwait holds the key: profit! Oil! Neither Israel nor Cyprus has anything to offer.

Today, while American ambassadors are doing everything possible to pacify the two countries, Turkey claims that parts of Greece on the north should be Turkish. They believe that the island of Cyprus should be equally divided. At the end of 1992 Cyprus’s population was 718,000 of these 81.7% were Greek Cypriots and 18.3% were Turkish Cypriots.(The Cyprus Problem 4)

The Cyprus Problem. Nicosia-Cyprus, Press and Information Office, Republic of Cyprus, 1995

Paidoussi, Helen. Personal Interview. 3 December, 1997

The Refugees of Cyprus. Nicosia-Cyprus, Press and Information Office, Republic of Cyprus, 1996