Τρίτη 11 Αυγούστου 2009
Turk soldiers murdered handicapped children in Cyprus - Τούρκοι στατιώτες δολοφόνησαν ανάπηρα παιδιά στη Κύπρο (βίντεο)
Above is a piece, with English subtitles, from last night's Cyprus TV news reporting that the remains of a family of four killed by Turkish soldiers during Turkey's invasion of the island in 1974 have been identified. The father, mother and their two handicapped children, from the occupied village of Lapithos, were buried under a lemon tree in the grounds of the home and their remains discovered and handed over to occupation authorities in 2002 by the Turkish settlers occupying the property as they were building an extension to the house.
Not only are we shocked by the bloodthirsty cowardice of Turkish soldiers; but we also wonder about the Turkish settlers in this story, who shamelessly and without, apparently, any disturbance to their consciences, reside in and enjoy the property of a family so brutally murdered.
Lapithos is also the town where a good proportion of the 8,000 Britons who have settled in occupied Cyprus now reside, including the notorious criminals David and Linda Orams, who were ordered earlier this year by the European Court of Justice to return the land they have usurped to its rightful owner, Meletios Apostolides, a judgment awaiting ratification or otherwise by the English Court of Appeal in November.
hellenicantidote
LETTER TO EDITOR: Time for Turkey to talk turkey
Buket Kop's Monday letter, "Settling Cyprus," neglects to mention the major setback to any real hope of a settlement or solution to the division of the island of Cyprus -- the bullying presence of many thousands of Turkish soldiers, the most blaring reminder of Turkey's military legacy on the island.
The Turkish military invasion of Cyprus, launched on the orders of the Bulent Ecevit government of Turkey on July 20, 1974, was an attack by land, sea and air on a relatively small, defenseless island. Those forces, which under the rejected Annan Plan would have been allowed to sit on the island, forced hundreds of thousands of people out of their homes, towns and villages and killed thousands of Cypriots -- acts that could be considered ethnic cleansing or even genocide.
On July 10, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan reacted to the killing of 150 ethnic Turks, the Uighurs, in China by calling it an act of genocide. "These incidents in China are as if they are genocide," he said. "We ask the Chinese government not to remain a spectator to these incidents. There is clearly a savagery here."
Turkish military forces killed more than 150 people in Cyprus, even by official Turkish statistics. "Instead of pointing the finger at others," to borrow Mr. Kop's phrase, Turkish officials should take the time to look in the mirror and ask themselves: With the legacy of the Pontian Greek genocide and the genocide in Cyprus, why would the victims of such savagery want to live under Turkish military rule?
GEORGIA MARATHEFTIS
Executive director
Cyprus Action Network of America (CANA)
New York
washingtontimes
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