"JUST LET REFUGEES STAY WHERE
THEY ARE"
By Loucas G. Charalambous
Sunday Mail, 19th
March 2006
"WE HAVE been shouting and
protesting for 30 years because the Turkish Cypriots
have been building on our property. But the
legitimate government (of Cyprus) gave us money to
build houses on the properties of the Turkish
Cypriots. And at the time they lied to us, telling
us that they had given us state land. This was what
was written on the documents we signed."
I retained these words, uttered
by a frustrated citizen in a television news story
about a noisy protest held last Tuesday in Polemidia
by hundreds of displaced persons who had built
houses on plots given to them by the Spyros
Kyprianou government some 30 years ago.
In the same report, a woman, who
was visibly angry, said: "We were fooled. They
brought us here, gave us land belonging to the
Turkish Cypriots and, through a life of hard toil,
we built our houses on it, married, brought up our
children and now they are telling us to leave and
that they will give us a plot somewhere else. In
other words, we have to start from the beginning
again. We will never leave. We will stay here and if
they dare, they can come and kick us out."
Similar sentiments were expressed
by several other protesters. I consider the words of
these people very important because they expose, in
the most damning way, the absurdity of the policy we
followed in the post-1974 years. The policy was
centred on the nefarious slogan, ‘All refugees will
return to their homes’.
I will not refer to the hypocrisy
of the parties in government, which, in view of the
elections, are now proceeding with the issuing of
title deeds for houses to thousands of refugees.
These very same parties lambasted the former
president Glafcos Clerides, accusing him of
treachery, when, seven or eight years ago, he
decided to issue title deeds. I had questioned the
wisdom of this move at the time, predicting that one
of the consequences would be to create resentment
among all refugees who had built houses on Turkish
Cypriot land; Tuesday’s protest in Polemidia proved
the point. During the Clerides presidency the
patriots of AKEL, EDEK and DIKO accused the
government of issuing ‘title deeds’ because it had
surrendered the right of the refugees to return to
their own homes.
The slogan about the "right of
all refugees to return to their homes", with which
politicians have been bombarding us for more than 30
years is a myth that has now collapsed, as the words
of the refugees mentioned above show. It is
blatantly obvious that today, 32 years after the
displacement of large sections of the population,
almost none of the refugees want to return to their
home – I refer to the areas that would be under
Turkish Cypriot control in the event of a federal
settlement.
There are three main reasons for
this. First, in the 32 years that have passed almost
half the refugees have died. Second, those who were
children in 1974 have now married and settled down
in the free areas, where they have their homes and
jobs. Third, a large number of them have settled
down in the government refugee estates or in Turkish
Cypriot properties, as in the case of the protesters
in Polemidia.
And the only thing they want is
to be able to stay permanently there, in the houses
in which they had married, given birth and brought
up their children, as the angry woman said on
television. I would like to stress this point
because, as I had written in a column just after the
referendum, this was one of the main reasons why
they voted against a settlement and would do so
again if they had to. These people are happy where
they are today and do not want another change in
their life.
That none of our leaders who have
been dealing with the Cyprus problem all these years
has been willing to take this harsh reality into
account is the main factor for our failure to reach
a settlement.