|
Greek Cypriot
State Terror Revealed
It is high time that the
tragic realities of Cyprus are acknowledged and the
responsibility for the violence and suffering
imposed on the Turkish Cypriot people be shouldered
by the true perpetrators
M. ERGÜN OLGUN - Undersecretary of the KKTC
Presidency
A recent statement of an ex-EOKA-B (National
Organization of Greek Cypriot Fighters-B) member
further reveals that attacks on Turkish Cypriots
during the years spanning 1963-74 were the result of
a systematic Greek Cypriot campaign. The following
account given by a living witness is an undeniable
testament to the fact that atrocities to which
Turkish Cypriots were subjected were indeed a
premeditated Greek Cypriot policy.
In an interview published in Greek Cypriot daily
Alithia, a 67-year-old Greek Cypriot named Andreas
Dimitriu confessed to being involved in one of the
massacres of 1974. Dimitriu is reported to have
revealed that, in accordance with an official order,
he and a few other volunteers helped the Greek
Cypriot police gather Turkish Cypriot men of the
village of Taşkent (Dohni) into a coffee shop.
Dimitriu continued to state that upon his arrival to
the Turkish Cypriot quarter of Taşkent the day
following the roundup, he found out that Greek
Cypriot soldiers had already attacked many Turkish
Cypriots, including the rape of a number of Turkish
Cypriot women living in the quarter. The newspaper
reported that fearing further atrocities, Turkish
Cypriot men had gathered at the village school while
the women took collective refuge in a few area
homes. According to Dimitriu, all Turkish Cypriot
men were taken away in a bus by armed soldiers that
night. Dimitriu went on to state that he learned a
few days later from a Turkish Cypriot from the
village of Tatlısu (Mari) that all those who had
been rounded up had been killed.
The fate of the 89 Turkish Cypriot men from Taşkent
was later discovered in the presence of the United
Nations. Having been taken by force from their homes
on Aug. 14, 1974, they were brutally murdered and
buried in mass graves. Bearing the guilt of this
inhuman massacre, Dimitriu confessed: "These things
happened in those days. What have we done that is
different from what was happening throughout the
island at those times? Whatever we did, we did in
collaboration with the legal forces of the state."
Dimitriu claimed also that the EOKA-B members
guarding the besieged Turkish Cypriots at Taşkent
did not know that soldiers later took the Turkish
Cypriots to their death.
When one rakes over the ashes of the past, many
similar dreadful stories surface. It is well
documented that between the years of 1963 and 1974
thousands of Turkish Cypriots had been killed and
wounded, with entire populations of many Turkish
Cypriot villages disappearing overnight. Greek
Cypriot researcher and filmmaker Antonis
Angastiniotis reported to the Greek Cypriot
English-language daily Cyprus Mail on Nov. 4, 2004
that:
"All Turkish Cypriots know what happened in the
villages of Aloa (Atlılar),Maratha (Muratağa) and
Sandalari (Sandallar). It is the Greek Cypriots who
do not. ... The Greek Cypriots of the neighboring
villages, along with army personnel, attacked these
villages. They shot the children, the mothers and
any old people left in the villages.… For me this
became a nightmare because all these years I had
been convinced that everything we had done was
right."
Turkish daily Hürriyet reported on Nov. 1, 2004 that
in his short film about the massacres documenting
the story of 126 people who were killed, Antonis
Angastiniotis had called on the Greek Cypriot people
to apologize to the Turkish Cypriot people,
prosecute the culprits and pay compensation to the
families of the deceased.
As in the point noted above, it must be made clear
that the future cannot and should not be held
prisoner to the agonies of the past. To achieve
this, a transformation is required that will
facilitate healing and the emergence of a clear
conscience in order to build the necessary mutual
trust and confidence to move forward. As also
stressed by President Denktaş, the fact that
individuals are beginning to speak about the
atrocious realities of the past is a very positive
development. These admissions demonstrate beyond the
shadow of a doubt that the violence of the past was
not the work of uncontrolled EOKA terrorists, as has
been claimed by the Greek Cypriot administration,
but an organized case of state terror administered
by the Greek Cypriot leaders themselves. It is also
important to recognize that this aggression
continues even today in the form of all-encompassing
embargoes on the economic, cultural and political
lives of the Turkish Cypriot people. The present
Greek Cypriot policy continues to be aimed at
preventing each and every effort geared toward the
lifting of such embargoes. This fact clearly
demonstrates that the Greek Cypriot side is still
determined to utilize any and all means available to
deprive the Turkish Cypriots of their basic human
rights.
It is high time that the tragic realities of Cyprus
are acknowledged and the responsibility for the
violence and suffering imposed on the Turkish
Cypriot people be shouldered by its true
perpetrators. Turkey and the Turkish Cypriot people
cannot be held responsible for the consequences for
a war Greece and its Greek Cypriot supporters
started in contravention to international law and
with the aim of realizing a constitutionally
prohibited objective, enosis, or the union of Cyprus
with Greece.
In order to create the necessary atmosphere of
confidence for a sustainable and peaceful future on
the island, it is essential that Greek Cypriot
leadership put an end to its campaign of reality
distortion and oppressive policies. Greek Cypriot
leadership needs to admit past atrocities, take
responsibility for them and apologizes to the
Turkish Cypriot people. It is only then that the
foundation for a sustainable, negotiated settlement
can be laid. |