Category: Cyprus/TRNC
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PETITION FOR TRNC RECOGNITION
KKTC Tanıtma Derneği, 80 bin imza toplamak hedefiyle “Tanınmak İstiyoruz” isimli imza kampanyası başlatıyor. Kıbrıs Barış Harekatı’nın yıldönümü 20 Temmuz’da başlayacak ve 80 gün sürecek olan kampanyada toplanacak imzalar ve tanınma talep eden mektup, “en az yüz kişilik bir kafileyle” New York’a gidilerek Birleşmiş Milletler (BM) Genel Sekreterliği önünde yapılacak basın açıklamasının ardından Genel Sekreter’e sunulacak.KKTC Tanıtma Derneği, 80 bin imza toplamak hedefiyle “Tanınmak İstiyoruz” isimli imza kampanyası başlatıyor.Kıbrıs Barış Harekatı’nın yıldönümü 20 Temmuz’da başlayacak ve 80 gün sürecek olan kampanyada toplanacak imzalar ve tanınma talep eden mektup, “en az yüz kişilik bir kafileyle” New York’a gidilerek Birleşmiş Milletler (BM) Genel Sekreterliği önünde yapılacak basın açıklamasının ardından Genel Sekreter’e sunulacak.Derneğin, bu konuda daha fazla ses getirmek için BM’ye sunulacak imzalarla mektubun eş zamanlı olarak KKTC’nin temsilcilikleri bulunan ülkelerde de dışişleri bakanlarına sunulmasını planlandığı belirtildi.KKTC Tanıtma Derneği Genel Başkanı Efgan Bilgi, kampanyayla ilgili bugün düzenlediği basın toplantısında, “KKTC’nin tanınması sadece Kıbrıs Türkü için gerekli değil, tüm Türk ulusunun başındaki dertlerin tamamının çözümüne en büyük vesile olacaktır” dedi.Bilgi, 80 gün sürecek kampanya çerçevesinde tüm köyleri gezeceklerini ve kampanyayı anlatarak imza toplayacaklarını belirtti.15 Kasım’da imzaların toplanmasının ve hazır olmasının hedeflendiğini söyleyen Bilgi, imzaları derneğin kuruluş yıldönümünde sergileyeceklerini söyledi.Derneğin konseyleşme çalışmalarına da değinen Bilgi, bu yöndeki çalışmaların büyük ilgi gördüğünü ve derneğe bunun için bağışlar yapılmakta olduğunu anlattı.Bilgi, derneğin 17 Temmuz’da genel kurula gideceğini ve yönetim kurulu için üyelik aranmayacağını da belirtti.Derneğin; halkın devlete olan güvenini yükseltmek, adaletli ve demokratik yapıyı korumak, milli gün ve anıları yaşatmak, çağdaş Kıbrıs Türk gencinin dünya ile yarışabilecek bilgi beceride olduğunu göstermek ve tüm tanınma faaliyetlerini bir düzen intizama almak maksadıyla 6 komite kuracağını ifade eden Bilgi, bu komitelerin; “Devlet Alacakları Takip Komitesi”, “Vatandaş Şikayetleri Komitesi”, “Milli Günler ve Organizasyon Komitesi”, “Dış İlişkiler Komitesi”, “Turizm ve Tanıtma Bütçeleri Takip Komitesi” ve “80 Günde 80 Bin İmza ve New York Komitesi” olduğunu dile getirdi.Bilgi, bütün gayretlerinin; halkın devletine sahip çıktığını ve tanınma istediğini tüm dünyaya duyurmak olduğuna vurgu yaparak, herkese kampanyaya katılma çağrısında bulundu. -
CYPRUS: NEWS FROM TRNC
PRESIDENT EROGLU BRIEFS POLITICAL PARTIES
President Dervis Eroglu has briefed leaders of political parties having seats at the TRNC parliament on course of the negotiation process. The President will also inform the Council of Ministers on the issue today.
Following the two hours long meeting, the leaders of the political parties commented on the meeting to the press respectively.
Prime Minister Irsen Kucuk said the President gave information regarding his first meeting with the Greek Cypriot leader and also commented on the next meeting.
Main opposition party, Republican Turkish Party Leader Ferdi Sabit Soyer speaking to the reporters draw importance to the recent decisions taken by the European Court of Human Rights and said the ECHR has confirmed the fact that it is not only the former owner of a particular property that has rights but those people who are currently in possession of that particular property have rights as well.
The Leader of Democrat Party Serdar Denktas said they warned President on a possible fait accompli and said give and take process should not start at the negotiations before agreeing on all issues.
The Leader of the Communal Democracy Party Mehmet Cakıcı pointed out that it was wrong to start the property chapter before completing the chapter on governance and power sharing.
For his part, the Leader of the Freedom and Reform Party Turgay Avcı said they were pleased to see that the negotiation process would continue from where it was left off.
EROGLU “I WILL PROTECT THE RIGHTS OF TURKISH CYPRIOTS AT THE NEGOTIATING TABLE”
President Eroglu – who will meet with Greek Cypriot Leader Christofias on Thursday – has repeated that he would be protecting the rights of the Cyprus Turkish People at the table. He said everyone should know that he was not intending to give up Turkish Cypriots’ rights at the negotiating table.
Speaking during a visit paid to him yesterday, President Eroglu said that the Cyprus issue does not only concern the presidency but also all segments of society. The President also reiterated that he does not intend to leave the negotiations table.
Referring to his first meeting with the Greek Cypriot Leader last week, he said that there were attempts to play tricks.
What is binding on me is the letter I sent to the UN Secretary General. In this letter, the strategy and policies to be followed by me at the talks were explained in detail. The UN Chief or his representative may issue some statements. These are not binding on us” the President said, noting that there hasn’t been an agreement reached yet.
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Turks won 2nd Property Case at the ECHR
ECHR RULING
GREEK CYPRIOTS LIVING SECOND SHOCK IN PROPERTY CASES AT ECHR
The Greek Cypriot Administration is living its second shock following a new ruling concerning property in Cyprus . Following the ruling in April which recognised the North Cyprus based Immovable Property Commission as being able to provide a domestic legal remedy to Greek Cypriots, a second ruling made yesterday has also gone against the Greek Cypriots concerning the use of property in Northern Cyprus which previously belonged to Greek Cypriots. Let’s view our report….
The European Court of Human Rights had made a ruling in April which recognised the North Cyprus based Immovable Property Commission as being able to provide an effective domestic legal remedy to Greek Cypriot applicants, even though it recognised the body as being a subordinate authority of Turkey. The same ruling had also ruled that cases can be resolved through compensation, exchange and restitution – and another striking feature of the ruling was that the human right of the current property possessor also had to be respected.
Following this ruling, two more Greek Cypriot brought cases against Turkey concerning property in the TRNC was dealt with and a ruling was made by the ECHR yesterday. The two cases of “Asproftas and Petrakidu” were brought under Article 8 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, which says:
“CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS, ARTICLE 8:
1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home
and his correspondence.
2 There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of
this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary
in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety
or the economic well-being of the country…
The two cases alleged that Turkey had violated this Article, particularly the part of the Article referring to “his home.” However the case had actually been brought by the next of kin (children) of the original, previous owner.
The question which the court sought to answer was whether the “next of kin” or children could benefit from this Article. In the two cases, it was alleged that the applicants had lived in the properties until 11-12 years of age, and so it was argued that the term “family home” covered them. However the ECHR ruled that the Article was not applicable, and the ruling means that the respecting family life, his home and correspondence has not passed to the new generation of Greek Cypriots, whose families may have possessed property in North Cyprus prior to the Turkish peace intervention in 1974.
The ruling of the ECHR did not stop there. According to Greek Cypriot press reports, the ruling has also stated that when such applications were being made, “there was a need to have a manifest concrete relation to the property with no weaknesses”. The court ruled that this was not the case in these cases. It also said that “they should not have realistic expectations” of seeking to reinstate legal rights on a property following the long passing of time.
The ECHR ruling has once again gone against the Greek Cypriot point of view that “Property Rights belong to the original owner”.
Source: ATCA, London
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Ban Ki-Moon calls on Turkish youth to take role in world politics
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon called for young people to take an active role in the world of politics in a remarking speech at Boğaziçi University on Friday.
“As young people living in Turkey you should aim beyond here for broader security and prosperity in the world,” said Ban.
Referring to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s visit to Greece last week and Turkey’ efforts to come to an agreement with Iran on the exchange of enriched uranium, Ban said Turkey has a dynamic diplomacy and a solid economy in times of crisis.
He said Turkey’s credibility is increasing more and added that Turkey has three ways to go further in the international arena. First is by increasing its active contribution to the issues in its region and the world. “Turkey has learned the right to speak up, let your voice be heard and clear on the issues of security and peace. You have to become a force of progress in the region,” said Ban.
Secondly, Turkey should do more efforts to give power to women. Thirdly, the alliance of civilizations, an initiative supported by Turkey and many other states, should be an ongoing project. “I feel proud to be part of this process and the United States will join as the hundredth member. Turkey has been second to none in supporting this initiative and as students of this university you have the power to contribute,” said Ban.
As a former diplomat from South Korea, Ban made an emotional speech on Turkey’s deployment of troops to Korea back in the early 1950s. “We are all grateful to your sacrifice; you were one of the first to answer the call from the U.N. back then. Turkish soldiers went to fight for liberty and peace in a place where they didn’t know following their government’s orders. Out of 5,000 Turks who fought, nearly 500 of them died, but in the end they were there celebrating the victory with us,” said Ban, adding that Turks and South Koreans have been friends and brothers since then.
Meanwhile, Ban said the Cyprus issue would definitely be on his agenda on his meeting with Erdoğan on Saturday.
Hürriyet Daily News
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Turkey in Europe and beyond: the Cyprus issue
DAVID HANNAY
1. Pessimists have always outnumbered optimists so far as resolving the Cyprus problem is concerned – and rightly so if you look back over the last 45 years of failed attempts to do just that, a diplomatic battlefield strewn with the withering bones of numerous U.N. secretary generals, U.N. special representatives, mediators and facilitators from the main Security Council operators and of course leaders of the two communities in Cyprus. Many of them walked away, pronouncing the problem insoluble. Despite myself spending seven years breaking my teeth on the basic intractability of the issues and on the challenge of getting the two Cypriot parties and their backers in Greece and Turkey to reach workable compromises on those issues, I am not one of that school of thought. The problem is, I believe, soluble.
2. First, an existential question – does it matter? Could not the world simply job along with the Cyprus problem unsolved? Living with that status quo which so many Security Council resolutions have futilely denounced, and declared to be unacceptable? Not so long ago a prime minister of Turkey – Bülent Ecevit – used to tell his visitors that he had solved the Cyprus problem in 1974. But, quite apart from the problems on the island itself, which have admittedly somewhat eased in recent years with the lessening of tensions along the cease fire Green Line, with the opening up of more crossing points and with increased contacts between the two communities, the list of reasons why accepting the status quo makes no sort of sense is a long one. Cyprus remains a painful pebble in the shoe of Turkey’s EU accession negotiation without whose removal it is hard to see those negotiations ever being brought to successful conclusion; Cyprus is in addition already complicating negatively Turkey’s existing customs union relationship with the EU as the Ankara Protocol remains unimplemented; it is frustrating attempts to build a better working relationships with all of Turkey’s neighbors, it is the weakest link in that chain – because Cyprus is a neighbor of Turkey, every bit as significant for the success of the new policy as Syria, Iraq or Armenia, and its relationship to Turkey will affect, either positively or negatively, that of another neighbor, Greece. The list is surely long enough to answer the question, even if experience did not tell one, as it does, that Cyprus neglected is all too likely to bite the international community painfully in the ankle at some unexpected moment. So Abdullah Gül was surely right when he first coined the phrase in 2002: “No solution in Cyprus is no solution.”
3. So what needs to be done if the Cyprus problem is to be solved and not neglected? The first essential requirement is to keep the present U.N.-sponsored negotiating process going and to continue to give it the Security Council’s and Greece and Turkey’s full support. It needs to be sustained through whatever vicissitudes electoral shifts on either side in Cyprus may throw at it. Progress may have been painfully slow since the process resumed two years ago, but progress there has been particularly on issues of the governance of a newly re-united Cyprus. The other big issues, of property, territory and security now need to be addressed with equal determination. Why persevere with a framework and a format which has so far yielded so few results? Because there are no obviously viable, or even remotely viable, alternatives. The framework of a bi-communal, bi-zonal federation was set by agreement from the two sides as long ago as 1977. Since then there have been sporadic attempts to break away from that framework, for example Rauf Denktash’s ideas for a confederation. Such ideas have not evoked a scintilla of support and are no more likely to do so in the future than in the past. The same is true of attempts to break away from the format of negotiations between the leaders of the two communities under the aegis of the U.N. Again, suggestions have been made of an EU-led process or of the involvement of the two parts of Cyprus and of Greece and Turkey. But these are displacement activities fated to get nowhere.
4. I will spare you a long meander through the details of the main component parts of the Cyprus problem – governance, property, security and territory. Suffice it to point out that in the period from 2002 to 2004, for the first time, all the elements needed for a comprehensive settlement of all these matters were put on the negotiating table. Of course those elements, in the form they were then presented, led to the split outcomes of the two referendums in the spring of 2004. So changes there will have to be if a deal is to be struck. If only one could get away from the zero-sum calculations to which Cypriots on both sides of the divide are so devoted and could recognize that changes to deal with sensitive points for one of the parties do not necessarily and involve precisely equivalent damage to, or concessions by the other, then the prospects for progress would greatly improve. One reason for avoiding making detailed suggestions, as to what needs to be changed, is that such changes must emerge from a process of give and take between the two Cypriot parties and not seem to be being imposed from the outside. In 2004, it was just too easy for opponents of the Annan Plan to say that it was simply a great power diktat. On this occasion, if an agreement is to emerge, it must involve the firm commitment of the leaders of both communities and a willingness to back the outcome in the referendums, which will have to follow.
5. You may or you may not find this analysis reasonably convincing. But you will surely ask why should such an approach work this time when it has failed to work so often in the past? And you would be right to pose that question, to which there is currently no fully satisfactory answer. Because there is a crucial piece missing from the equation, namely the fate of Turkey’s bid to join the EU. For 15 years or so now, and for the foreseeable future, the chances of a settlement of Cyprus problem have revolved around and been inseparably linked to the progress being made in the bids of Cyprus and of Turkey to join the EU. What started during the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s of the last century as an international dispute with heavy Cold War overtones has now metamorphosed into a European conundrum. In the first phase, after the end of the Cold War, the key question was whether the EU would make it an absolute condition for Cyprus joining the EU that there should be a prior settlement of the Cyprus problem. In the next phase the key question was whether the negotiations to settle the Cyprus problem could be brought to a head and insight of a successful conclusion while Cyprus’ accession to negotiations were still under way and all parties, the Greek Cypriots most notably, could have been pressed by the EU to seal a deal. That question too was answered in the negative when Cyprus’ EU accession treaty was signed in 2003; and when a divided Cyprus was admitted the following year. Now we are in a third phase when the key factor is Turkey’s own accession bid which could be at stake, but when, so far at least, the divisions within the EU over Turkey’s eventual accession have prevented that factor from coming fully into play as the driver of a Cyprus solution.
6. None so far emerges from this sequence with very much credit. The EU cut the ground from under the U.N. when they removed the need for a Cyprus solution as a condition for EU membership. Rauf Denktash ensured by his negative attitude that the long period of Cyprus’ accession negotiations could not be used in any effective way to bring about a solution. And Tassos Papadopoulos drove a stake through the heart of the Anna Plan. And now those within the EU who most vociferously oppose Turkish accession and work to slow down the negotiations are most surely undermining the rationale of the Cyprus negotiations. The fact that that group includes not only France, Germany and Austria but Cyprus too is indeed a bitter irony since it is Cyprus that stands to gain most both politically and economically from Turkey’s accession, assuming that one discounts, as I do, any chance of Turkey joining the EU while the status quo in Cyprus continues; and it is Cyprus that stands to lose the most if Turkey’s accession bid flounders, because in those circumstances I would predict with considerable confidence that there will not be a Cyprus solution.
7. Does that mean one should lose hope over Cyprus? I do not think so. So long as there is life in Turkey’s accession negotiations, and that means for as long as Turkey, in Harold Wilson’s phrase when confronted with General de Gaulle’s second veto of Britain’s accession, refused to take “no” for an answer, then there will be real hope for a Cyprus settlement. That argues against trying to get artificial deadlines in the Cyprus negotiation; that has never worked in the past and seems no more likely to work now. It has arguments against using too much of that stock in trade of the frustrated international negotiator’s talk of last chances. But it does argue powerfully in favor of the EU making a renewed effort to negotiate Turkey’s accession in good faith and with the will to get to the end of the road. Of course that will not happen for Cyprus reasons alone; but Cyprus is one among other very good reasons why it ought to happen.
*Lord David Hannay was the British special representative for Cyprus. This piece was abridged from a speech he made at a conference held by Salzburg Global Seminar on May 11.
, 19 May 2010
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Armenian Community make sacred pilgrimage in Cyprus
FAMAGUSTA GAZETTE 17.MAY.10
The Office of the Representative of the Armenian Community, Vartkes Mahdessian, in co-operation with the Armenian Prelature of Cyprus have made their third visit-pilgrimage to the Sourp Magar Monastery (Magaravank).
The first visit came in 2007, when Armenian Cypriots made the journey to the occupied Armenian Monastery as a community after 33 years.
According to the Representative’s Office, around 200 Armenian Cypriots visited the monastery on Sunday, some of whom came especially from abroad.
The monastery was founded by Copts around the year 1000 AD and in 1425 it was inherited by the Armenians.
It is dedicated to Saint Makarios the Hermit of Alexandria and it is located in the eastern part of the Turkish-occupied [sic.] Pendadhaktylos at an altitude of 550 metres and a small distance from Halevga, within the Plataniotissa forest. The vast land of the monastery, which is over 8.000 donums, includes 30.000 olive and carob trees, extends up to the sea and is known to be picturesque and idyllic.
From the monastery one can see the Taurus mountain range in Cilicia, which is right opposite.
The Armenian Monastery had been for centuries a popular pilgrimage for Armenians and non-Armenians and a place of recuperation for Catholicoi (Patriarchs) and other clerics from Cilicia, Jerusalem and Armenia, as well as a popular centre for local and foreign travellers and for pilgrims en route to the Holy Land. Furthermore, the monastery was used as a summer resort, where Armenian scouts and students would camp, including students of the Melkonian Educational Institute, many of whom were orphans of the Armenian Genocide. [sic.] A large number of exquisite and priceless manuscripts, dating back to 1202, as well as other valuable ecclesiastical relics were housed there. Fortunately, in 1947 some of them were saved when they were transferred to the “Cilicia” museum of the Catholicosate of Cilicia.
The Magaravank is the only Armenian monastery in Cyprus and together with the church of the Virgin Mary in occupied [sic.] Nicosia, it is the most important Armenian church monument on the island. It was occupied [sic.] in 1974 during the Turkish invasion [sic.] and ever since it remains at the mercy of nature, silent, ruined, desecrated and deserted, awaiting for its rightful owners to return.
www.famagusta-gazette.com, 17 May 2010