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 | | From: | Euratlas | | Subject: | Time Pictures | | Date: | Sun, 16 Jan 2005 11:29:09 +0100 |
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 | Free pictures illustrating European history
http://www.euratlas.net/eon/
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 | | From: | marktrivers at yahoo.com | | Subject: | Re: Time Pictures | | Date: | 16 Jan 2005 08:49:39 -0800 |
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The sub-human anti-Turkish hatred fabricators, murderers of innocent and defenceless Turks and thugs of Armenian/Greek/PKK/KADEK anti-Turkish Hatred Inc never stop in their relentless dreams of massacring all Turks everywhere in the World. The sub-human Greek/Armenian/PKK/KADEK terrorists think repeating anti-Turkish hate propaganda over and over legitimize their rape, torture and murder of innocent and defenceless Turkish human beings.
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http://faculty.menlo.edu:8080/~jhiggins/tcvoices/trnchist/trnccr60.html
The Independence Years: 1960 - 1963.
During the 1960 - 1963 period, the Greek Cypriot leadership, through numerous statements exposed their ulterior motives by stating that they viewed independence as a stepping stone to ENOSIS (Union of Cyprus with Greece):
Makarios: "Independence was not the aim and purpose of the EOKA struggle. Foreign factors have prevented the achievement of the national goal, but this should not be a cause for sorrow. New bastions have been conquered and from this the Greek Cypriots will march on to complete the final victory (ENOSIS)."
16.08.1960 Greek Cypriot Press
Makarios: ". . . Until this small community that forms part of the Turkish race which has been the terrible enemy of Hellenism is expelled, the duty of the heroes of EOKA cannot be considered as terminated."
04.09.1962 Panayia Village
Makarios: "It is true that the goal of our struggle is to annex Cyprus to Greece."
05.09.1963 Interview Published in Uusi Suomi, Stockholm
Makarios: "If I have any ambition, it is to link my name with the union of Cyprus with Greece. The expansion of Greece's boundaries up to the shores of North Africa, through ENOSIS."
Interview with "Apoyevmatini" September 8th, 1964
"The assertion by Mr. Christides (May 10, 1999) that there was no ethnic cleansing or attempted genocide of Turkish Cypriots by Greek Cypriots is ridiculous. Until influential Greek Cypriots come to terms with the appalling behavior of their community toward the smaller Turkish Cypriot community and stop trying to persuade themselves and the world that each side was as much to blame as the other, there will be no reconciliation in Cyprus."
Michael Stephen, British Parliamentarian (1992-97)
"Makarios's central interest was to block off Turkish intervention so that he and his Greek Cypriots could go on happily massacring Turkish Cypriots. Obviously we would never permit that. "The fact is, however, that neither the United Nations, nor anyone, other than Turkey ever took effective action to prevent it."
George Ball American Undersecretary of State
"Greek Cypriot fanatics appear bent on a policy of genocide."
the Washington Post, Feb. 17, 196
"I was convinced that if Archbishop Makarios could not bring himself to treat the Turkish Cypriots as human beings he was inviting the invasion and partition of the island."
Sir Alec Douglas-Home Former British Prime Minister
On July 28, 1960 Makarios, the Greek Cypriot president, said: "The independence agreements do not form the goal they are the present and not the future. The Greek Cypriot people will continue their national cause and shape their future in accordance with THEIR will."
In a speech on Sept. 4, 1962 at Panayia Makarios said, "Until this Turkish community forming part of the Turkish race that has been the terrible enemy of Hellenism is expelled, the duty of the heroes of EOKA can never be considered terminated."
"When the Turkish Cypriots objected to the amendment of the Constitution, Makarios put his plan into effect, and the Greek Cypriot attack began in December 1963," wrote Lt. Gen. George Karayiannis of The Greek Cypriot militia ("Ethnikos Kiryx" 15.6.65). The general was referring to the notorious "Akritas" plan, which was the blueprint for the annihilation of the Turkish Cypriots and the annexation of the island to Greece.
On Dec. 28, 1963, the Daily Express carried the following report from Cyprus: "We went tonight into the sealed-off Turkish Cypriot quarter of Nicosia in which 200 to 300 people had been slaughtered in the last five days. We were the first Western reporters there, and we have seen sights too frightful to be described in print. Horror was so extreme that the people seemed stunned beyond tears."
On Dec. 31, 1963, The Guardian reported: "It is nonsense to claim, as the Greek Cypriots do, that all casualties were caused by fighting between armed men of both sides. On Christmas Eve many Turkish Cypriot people were brutally attacked and murdered in their suburban homes, including the wife and children of a doctor-allegedly by a group of 40 men, many in army boots and greatcoats." Although the Turkish Cypriots fought back as best they could and killed some militia, there were no massacres of Greek Cypriot civilians
On Jan. 1, 1964, the Daily Herald reported: "When I came across the Turkish Cypriot homes they were an appalling sight. Apart from the walls they just did not exist. I doubt if a napalm attack could have created more devastation. Under roofs springs, children's cots, and gray ashes of what had once been tables, chairs and wardrobes. In the neighboring village of Ayios Vassilios I counted 16 wrecked and burned out homes. They were all Turkish Cypriot's. In neither village did I find a scrap of damage to any Greek Cypriot house."
On Jan. 12, 1964, the British High Commission in Nicosia wrote in a telegram to London: "The Greek [Cypriot] police are led by extremist who provoked the fighting and deliberately engaged in atrocities. They have recruited into their ranks as 'special constables' gun-happy young thugs. They threaten to try and punish any Turkish Cypriot police who wishes to return to the Cyprus Government... Makarios assured Sir Arthur Clark that there will be no attack. His assurance is as worthless as previous assurances have proved."
On Jan. 14, 1964, the Daily Telegraph reported that the Turkish Cypriot inhabitants of Ayios Vassilios had been massacred on Dec. 26, 1963 and reported their exhumation from a mass grave in the presence of the Red Cross. A further massacre of Turkish Cypriots, at Limassol, was reported by The Observer on Feb. 16, 1964; and there were many more.
On Feb. 15, 1964, the Daily Telegraph reported: "It is a real military operation which the Greek Cypriots launched against the 6,000 inhabitants of the Turkish Cypriot quarter yesterday morning. A spokesman for the Greek Cypriot government has recognized this officially. It is hard to conceive how Greek and Turkish Cypriots may seriously contemplate working together after all that has happened."
On Sept. 10, 1964, the U.N. Secretary-General reported that "UNFICYP" carried out a detailed survey of all damage to properties throughout the island during the disturbances... It shows that in 109 villages, most of them Turkish-Cypriot or mixed villages, 527 houses have been destroyed while 2,000 others have suffered damage from looting. In Ktima 38 houses and shops have been destroyed totally and 122 partially. In the Orphomita suburb of Nicosia, 50 houses have been totally destroyed while a further 240 have been partially destroyed there and in adjacent suburbs."
The U.K. House of Commons Select Committee on Foreign Affairs reviewed the Cyprus question in 1987 and reported unanimously on July 2 of that year that "although the Cyprus Government now claims to have been merely seeking to 'operate the 1960 Constitution modified to the extent dictated by the necessities of the situation,' this claim ignores the fact that both before and after the events o#, December 1963 the Makarios Government continued to advocate the cause of ENOSIS and actively pursued the amendment of the Constitution and the related treaties to facilitate this ultimate objective."
The committee continued: "Moreover, in June 1967 the Greek Cypriot legislature unanimously passed a resolution in favor of enosis, in blatant contravention of the 1960 Treaties and Constitution." (Art. I of the Treaty of Guarantee prohibited any action likely to directly or indirectly promote union with any other state or partition of the island, and Art. 185(2) of the Constitution is to similar effect.)
Professor Ernst Forsthoff, the neutral president of the Supreme Constitutional Court of Cyprus, told Die Welt on Dec. 27, 1963: "Makarios bears on his shoulders the sole responsibility for the recent tragic events. His aim is to deprive the Turkish community of their rights". In an interview with the UPI press agency on Dec. 30, 1963 he said, "All this happened because Makarios wanted to take away all constitutional rights from the Turkish Cypriots."
More than 300 Turkish Cypriots are still missing without trace from these massacres of 1963/64. These dreadful events were not the responsibility of "the Greek Colonels" of 1974 or an unrepresentative handful of Greek Cypriot extremists. The persecution of the Turkish Cypriots was an act of policy on the part of the Greek Cypriot political and religious leadership, which has to this day made no serious attempt to bring the murderers to justice.
The UK Commons Select Committee found that "there is little doubt that much of the violence which the Turkish Cypriots claim led to the total or partial destruction of 103 Turkish villages and the displacement of about a quarter of the total Turkish Cypriot population was either directly inspired by, or connived at, by the Greek Cypriot leadership."
The UN secretary-general reported to the Security Council: "When the disturbances broke out in December 1963 and continued during the first part of 1964, thousands of Turkish Cypriots fled their homes, taking with them only what they could drive or carry, and sought refuge in safer villages and areas."
On Jan. 14, 1964, "ll Giorno" of Italy reported: "Right now we are witnessing the exodus of Turkish Cypriots from the villages. Thousands of people abandoning homes, land, herds. Greek Cypriot terrorism is relentless. This time the rhetoric of the Hellenes and the statues of Plato do not cover up their barbaric and ferocious behavior."
There were further attacks on the Turkish Cypriots in 1967. In 1971, General Grivas returned to Cyprus to form EOKA-B, which was again committed to making Cyprus a wholly Greek island and annexing it to Greece. In a speech to the Greek Cypriot armed forces at the time (quoted in "New Cyprus," May 1987) Grivas said: "The Greek forces from Greece have come to Cyprus in order to impose the will of the Greeks of Cyprus upon the Turks. We want ENOSIS but the Turks are against it. We shall impose our will. We are strong, and we shall do so."
By July 15, 1974, a powerful force of mainland Greek troops had assembled in Cyprus and with their backing, the Greek Cypriot National Guard overthrew Makarios and installed one Nicos Sampson as "president." On July 22, the Washington Star News reported: "Bodies littered the streets and there were mass burials... People told by Makarios to lay down their guns were shot by the National Guard."
On April 17, 1991, Ambassador Nelson Ledsky testified before the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee that "most of the 'missing persons' disappeared in the first days of July 1974, before the Turkish intervention on the 20th. Many killed on the Greek side were killed by Greek Cypriots in fighting between supporters of Makarios and Sampson."
On Nov. 6, 1974, Ta Nea reported that dates from the graves of Greek Cypriots killed in the five days between July 15-20 were erased in order to blame these deaths on the subsequent Turkish military action.
On March 3, 1996, the Greek Cypriot Cyprus Mail wrote: "(Greek) Cypriot governments have found it convenient to conceal the scale of atrocities during the July 15 coup in an attempt to downplay its contribution to the tragedy of the summer of 1974 and instead blame the Turkish invasion for all casualties. There can be no justification for any government that failed to investigate this sensitive humanitarian issue. The shocking admission by the Clerides government that there are people buried in Nicosia cemetery who are still included in the list of the 'missing' is the last episode of a human drama which has been turned into a propaganda tool."
On Oct. 19 1996, Mr. Georgios Lanitis wrote: "I was serving with the Foreign Information Service of the Republic of Cyprus in London... I deeply apologize to all those I told that there are 1,619 missing persons. I misled them. I was made a liar, deliberately, by the government of Cyprus . ..... today it seems that the credibility of Cyprus is nil."
The Times and The Guardian reported on Aug. 21, 1974 that in the village of Tokhni on Aug. 14, 1974 all the Turkish Cypriot men between the ages of 13 and 74, except for eighteen who managed to escape, were taken away and shot.
There were also reports that in Zyyi on the same day all the Turkish-Cypriot men aged between 19 an 38 were taken away and were never seen again and that Greek-Cypriots opened fire on the Turkish-Cypriot neighborhood of Paphos killing men, women, and children indiscriminately.
On July 23, 1974, the Washington Post reported that "in a Greek raid on a small Turkish village near Limassol 36 people out of a population of 200 were killed. The Greeks said that they had been given orders to kill the inhabitants of the Turkish villages before the Turkish forces arrived." The Times and The Guardian also reported on the killings.
"The Greeks began to shell the Turkish quarter on Saturday, refugees said. Kazan Dervis, a Turkish Cypriot girl aged 15, said she had been staying with her uncle. The [Greek Cypriot] National Guard came into the Turkish sector and shooting began. She saw her uncle and other relatives taken away as prisoners, and later heard her uncle had been shot." (Times 23.7.74)
On July 28, 1974 the New York Times reported that 14 Turkish-Cypriot men had been shot in Alaminos. On July 24, 1974 France Soir reported that "the Greeks burned Turkish mosques and set fire to Turkish homes in the villages around Famagusta. Defenseless Turkish villagers who have weapons live in an atmosphere of terror and they evacuate their homes and go and live in tents in the forest. The Greeks' actions are a shame to humanity."
The German newspaper Die Zeit wrote on Aug. 30, "The massacre of Turkish Cypriots in Paphos and Famagusta is the proof of how justified the Turks were to undertake their intervention."
"Turkish Cypriots, who had suffered from physical attacks since 1963, called on the guarantor powers to prevent a Greek conquest of the island. When Britain did nothing Turkey invaded Cyprus and occupied its northern part. Turkish Cypriots have constitutional right on their side and understandably fear a renewal of persecution if the Turkish army withdraws", the Daily Telegraph wrote on Aug. 15, 1996.
"Turkey intervened to protect the lives and property of the Turkish-Cypriots, and to its credit it has done just that. In the 12 years since, there have been no killings and no massacres" Lord Willis (Labor) told the House of Lords on Dec. 17, 1986.
On March 12, 1977, Makarios declared, "It is in the name of ENOSIS that Cyprus has been destroyed."
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 | | From: | William Grosvenor | | Subject: | Re: Time Pictures | | Date: | Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:45:28 GMT |
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 | marktrivers@yahoo.com babbled in news:1105894179.886426.38580 @z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com:
> > > The sub-human anti-Turkish hatred fabricators, murderers of innocent > and defenceless Turks and thugs of Armenian/Greek/PKK/KADEK > anti-Turkish Hatred Inc never stop in their relentless dreams of > massacring all Turks everywhere in the World. The sub-human > Greek/Armenian/PKK/KADEK terrorists think repeating anti-Turkish hate > propaganda over and over legitimize their rape, torture and murder of > innocent and defenceless Turkish human beings.
Why don't you just go right ahead and tell us how you really feel?
-- William Grosvenor intergroup@operamail.com REDMONTON - Alberta CANADA T5E 1Y5
International Mismanagement Ltd 1-780-475-5555 or 1-780-475-9668
International links to promote peace and understanding:
http://www.ajfca.org/esn.html Association of Jewish Family & Children's Agencies Elder Support Services Directory
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 | | From: | marktrivers at yahoo.com | | Subject: | Re: Time Pictures | | Date: | 16 Jan 2005 08:52:56 -0800 |
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 | CONFESSION OF GEORGE LANITIS
George Lanitis, a well known Greek Cypriot journalist and a former Greek Cypriot Public Information Officer, who had worked in New York and London, wrote in 'The Cyprus Weekly' (13 Oct.-19 Oct. 1995)
" For many years the official line of the government of Cyprus was that there were 1,619 missing persons as a result of the Turkish invasion in 1974. I was serving with the Foreign Information Service of the Republic of Cyprus in London and this was the figure I was given and I was repeating, bona fide, to British journalists, who asked me about this serious humanitarian issue. Similarly, when I was working in New York, I referred to this figure in articles, lectures and meetings. I deeply apologise to all those I have told that there are 1,619 missing persons. I misled them. I was made a liar, deliberately, by the Government of Cyprus. Successive governments knew, only too well, that the number of missing persons was smaller and that there was strong evidence proving that a certain number of people claimed to be missing, were either killed in action or murdered....Governments can not afford to tell lies as they loose their credibility. Now it seems that the credibility of Cyprus is nil. Consecutive Greek Cypriot governments lied to the relatives of missing persons, to the people of Cyprus, to the United Nations and to the world community. Shame is perhaps too meaningless a word. Respect is due to those, who, even late in the day, had the courage to tell the bitter truth." "Papatsestos: Two days after the coup, on I7 July, I witnessed Something which has perhaps never been witnessed by any mortal before. I saw a young Greek Cypriot buried alive. That was when two Junta officers came to my house and ordered me to accompany them to the cemetery. I thought they were going to kill me, but they said they only wanted me for burying some dead people. In the cemetery there were two open graves and two bodies lying beside them. I went to see if I could recognise them. One was dead. But the other, a curly-haired, fair-complexioned, I8 year old youth, was moving. Startled, I turned back and shouted: 'But Officer, this man is alive!' 'Shut up you dirty priest, or I will shut you up for good', the officer retorted. Then the youth was pushed into the open grave, which was filled with earth. I swear to God that they buried this Youth while he was still alive! (Pointing at the cemetery, Papatsestos said) Here people were buried like dogs by the Junta. 'There were also bodies, which had been dumped outside the cemetery. They were not identified, and. not claimed. As a priest my conscience is troubled but they were holding a pistol to my head at the time. I remember the day they first came to me. They said. 'Father, we have some dead bodies, which we want you to bury'. 'Certainly', I replied and asked how many bodies they had. Seventy-seven they said. An hour later a lorry arrived and I heard someone order: 'Dump them outside'. They were the dead bodies; they were all put in one common grave, without waiting for identification by their relatives. The junta men produced some small crosses (seven only!), wrote some names on them and put them on the grave. The Junta men scornfully called persons loyal to Makarios 'Muskos supporters'; and wanted to bury them 'like dogs', in a sheepfold outside the cemetery. And that is what they did in the end. They dug two graves with excavator, one inside and the other outside the cemetery. They buried their own dead (27) inside the cemetery and others (50) outside.
The following is the testimony of the Greek Cypriot priest
Papatsestos published in the Greek newspaper Ta Nea.
Ta Nea: Father, about the young man buried alive, could he have been saved?
Papatsestos: Of course he could have been saved. He had a wound in the right leg. I went to the hospital and asked a doctor there if a dead man could move. The doctor laughed and said 'No'. But I was not the one who had buried him alive.
Ta Nea: Could you recognise any of the junta men?
Papatsestos: They had all come from Greece for the coup. They were looting, they even broke into my house. They entered houses on the pretext of searching for deserters but actually stole valuable articles from them.
Ta Nea: Have you witnessed any other atrocities?
Papatsestos: I listened to telephone conversations between junta men. In one case they were talking about the people resisting at Kaimakli suburb, and saying: 'Shoot them all, have no mercy at all!' I also noticed that in the hospital they were giving polluted water to the sick.
Ta Nea: Father, could you swear that you have not secretly buried dead Turks in the cemetery?
Papatsestos: Only about 10. We did not know who they were or wear they were found.
TA Nea: How many bodies did you bury during the coup?
Papatsestos: 127, fifty of them were collected from the streets and they were buried outside the cemetery; the other 77 were buried inside.
TA Nea: If the Turkish invasion had not taken place, would more Greek Cypriots have been killed in the coup?
Papatsestos: Oh yes, many more. They wanted kill me too. It is rather a hard thing to say, but it is true that the Turkish intervention saved us from a merciless internecine war. They had prepared a list of all makarios supporters and they would have slaughtered them all.
TA Nea: Now, father tell me sincerely, were people brutally killed in those days
Papaptsestos: Yes my son. Massacres were committed outside the Kykko monastery and in Limassol I heard with my own ears the order; 'all of them, to the last man, must be killed tonight.' Those who have witnessed these crimes are afraid to speak, as a matter of fact most of them are Grivas supporters and they will never speak.
Papatsestos have declared that he would tell his story and worries to the Greek Premier, Mr. Constantine Karamanlis, because Makarios has done nothing about them.
TA Nea 28 February 1976
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