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Wednesday, March 03, 2010

Columnist: The scandalous history of Cyprus

After decades of botched interferences, the EU should practice what it preaches and ensure that Turkey withdraws its troops, argues columnist Robert Ellis in The Guardian newspapers.

Although Turkey invaded Cyprus in 1974 continues to occupy one-third of the island, Great Britain and the United States share in the blame for decades of suffering by the Cypriot people, Ellis writes.

From his column:
According to the 1923 treaty of Lausanne Turkey had renounced all claim to Cyprus, so it had to manufacture a series of arguments – historical, geographical and above all strategic – to justify its interest in the island. In 1956 Nihat Erim submitted a report to prime minister Adnan Menderes, which can be considered the blueprint for Turkey's strategy over the last 50 years. The Erim report clearly states that the only solution for Cyprus consists of partition under Turkish control and mentions population exchange and settlement by mainland Turks as means to this end. The following year the Turkish Cypriot leader, Dr Fazil Küçük, proposed a division of the island that corresponds to the final line of the Turkish advance, the Atilla Line, in 1974.

The US ranks high among the villains. After fighting broke out in 1964 the Acheson plan proposed partition as a solution, but this was not achieved until the Greek junta's coup against Makarios and Turkey's intervention in 1974 – both with the covert support of Henry Kissinger.

The Annan plan of 2004 was, in fact, a British and American plan to secure the reunification of Cyprus and the strategic goal of Turkey's membership of the EU, but the final version was rejected by the Greek Cypriots because it was heavily weighted in Turkey's favour.
Read the full column at the newspaper's Web site.

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