Exclusively available inside The International Herald Tribune in Greece and Cyprus  
  Tuesday July 20, 2004 - Archive
Current Edition | Athens Stock Exchange | Useful Information | Greek Edition | Site Search  
  Search
Home page
ENGLISH EDITION
Date
20/07/2004  
Frontpage
News
Commentaries
S/E Europe
Features
Business. & Fin.
Arts & Leisure
Sports
Weather
Classifieds
Cartoon Archive
  RSS
INFORMATION
Company Profile
Health & Emergency
NEWS
Cypriots mark their division

Today’s 30th anniversary of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus finds the island still bitterly divided, with Greek Cypriots lamenting the day while Turkish Cypriots prepared parades to celebrate.

At 5.30 a.m. sirens will wail and flags will be flown at half-staff as Greek Cypriots mark the moment that the Turkish invasion began. A prayer service will be held in Nicosia for the island’s liberation, the return of refugees to their homes and the discovery of what happened to soldiers and citizens who went missing after the invasion. A memorial service for the fallen will follow, as will services across the island.

On the other hand, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul arrived on the Turkish-occupied part of the island to attend today’s celebrations and declared, “The peace operation of 1974 brought protection to the Turkish Cypriots and stability to the region.” Turkish naval ships docked in the occupied harbor of Keryneia yesterday. The invasion followed a Greek-Cypriot coup aimed at uniting the island with Greece.

The island remains divided after Greek Cypriots rejected a UN plan for its reunification whereas the Turkish Cypriots accepted it in a referendum on April 24. On Friday, the Greek Cypriots proposed a number of confidence-building measures aimed at retaking the initiative in the efforts to find a solution. These include a mutual pullback of forces from the ceasefire line, the de-mining of the buffer zone and opening of new transit points and joint administration over the port of Famagusta (which would allow Turkish-Cypriot goods to be exported from there without the risk of the de facto recognition of their breakaway state). Yesterday, Cypriot officials expressed disappointment that Mehmet Ali Talat, who leads the Turkish-Cypriot administration, rejected these proposals.

Print article | e-mail


[ Front Page ] [ News ] [ Commentaries ] [ S/E Europe ]
[ Features ] [ Business & Finance ] [ Arts & Leisure ] [ Sports ]
[ Subscriptions ] [ Editor ] [ Webmaster ]
Company Profile | Health & Emergency

News
In Brief
Security falls into place
New tram enters the fray in Athens
Cypriots mark their division
EU raps Greece on equality
Poll shows zeal for Olympics
Former Aris star netted with fake credit cards

English Edition - Greece's International English Language Newspaper
Exclusively available inside The International Herald Tribune in Greece and Cyprus
© 2009 H KAΘHMEPINH All rights reserved.