One part mourns, another celebrates as Cyprus marks 50 years since split
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[July 20, 2024]
By Michele Kambas
NICOSIA (Reuters) -Air raid sirens wailed across Cyprus's divided
capital Nicosia at dawn on Saturday as Greek Cypriots mourned, and
Turkish Cypriots celebrated, 50 years since Turkey invaded part of the
island in response to a brief Greek-inspired coup.
The ethnically split island is a persistent source of tension between
Greece and Turkey, which are both partners in NATO but are at odds over
numerous issues.
Their differences were laid bare on Saturday, with Turkish President
Tayyip Erdogan attending a celebratory military parade in north Nicosia
to mark the day in 1974 when Turkish forces launched an offensive that
they call a "peace operation".
Later in the day, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis was due to
attend an event in the south of the city to commemorate what Greeks
commonly refer to as the "barbaric Turkish invasion".
Mitsotakis posted an image of a blood-stained map of Cyprus on his
LinkedIn page with the words "Half a century since the national tragedy
of Cyprus".
There was jubilation in the north.
"The Cyprus Peace Operation saved Turkish Cypriots from cruelty and
brought them to freedom," Erdogan said, criticizing the south for having
a "spoiled mentality" and seeing itself as the sole ruler of Cyprus.
But Erdogan left open a window to dialogue in deadlocked negotiations.
"We are ready for negotiations, to meet, and to establish long-term
peace and resolution in Cyprus," he said.
Peace talks are now stalled at two seemingly irreconcilable concepts -
Greek Cypriots want reunification as a federation. Turkish Cypriots want
a two-state settlement.
Cyprus gained independence from Britain in 1960, but a shared
administration between Greek and Turkish Cypriots quickly fell apart in
violence that saw Turkish Cypriots withdraw into enclaves and led to the
dispatch of a U.N. peacekeeping force.
The crisis left Greek Cypriots running the internationally recognized
Republic of Cyprus, a member of the European Union since 2004 with the
potential to derail Turkey's own decades-long aspirations of joining the
bloc.
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Loukas Alexandrou, 90 and his son sit above his other son's grave,
who was killed in the 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus at the Tymvos
Makedonitissas military cemetery, in Nicosia, Cyprus July 19, 2024.
REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou
REMEMBERING THE DEAD
Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides, whose office represents the
Greek Cypriot community in the reunification dialogue, said the
anniversary was a somber occasion for reflection and for remembering
the dead.
"Our mission is liberation, reunification and solving the Cyprus
problem," he said. "If we really want to send a message on this
tragic anniversary ... it is to do anything possible to reunite
Cyprus."
Turkey, he said, continued to be responsible for violating human
rights and international law over Cyprus.
Across the south, church services were held to remember the more
than 3,000 people who died in the Turkish invasion.
"It was a betrayal of Cyprus and so many kids were lost. It wasn't
just my son, it was many," said Loukas Alexandrou, 90, as he tended
the grave of his son at a military cemetery.
In Turkey, state television focused on violence against Turkish
Cypriots prior to the invasion, particularly on bloodshed in 1963-64
and in 1967.
Turkey's invasion took more than a third of the island and expelled
more than 160,000 Greek Cypriots to the south.
Reunification talks collapsed in 2017 and have been at a stalemate
since. Northern Cyprus is a breakaway state recognized only by
Turkey, and its Turkish Cypriot leadership wants international
recognition.
(Reporting By Michele Kambas and Stamos Prousalis in Nicosia, and
Azra Ceylan in Istanbul;Writing by Michele Kambas;Editing by Tom
Hogue and Helen Popper)
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