Tuesday 29 September 2009

Brighton conference

Baroness Kinnock pledges UK support for Cyprus settlementMinister for Europe, Baroness Glenys Kinnock, last night told UK Cypriots at the Labour party’s annual party conference that Cyprus remains high on the Government’s foreign policy agenda. At a fringe reception in Brighton, organised under the auspices of the National Federation of Cypriots in the UK by the Greek Cypriot Brotherhood, the Labour Cypriot Society, AKEL in Britain and EDEK UK, the Minister said that she will make an official visit to Cyprus next month, and pledged the British Government’s support to the direct negotiations currently under way between President Demetris Christofias and Turkish Cypriot leader Mr Mehmet Ali Talat.Baroness Kinnock spoke of her understanding of the sensitivities surrounding the current negotiations and of her understanding of the EU perspective, having served as an MEP for some years, saying:"The British Government supports a comprehensive settlement by the Cypriots for the Cypriots. A reunited Cyprus would bring huge benefits to the island and all interested parties."In his address to welcome attendees to the reception, Mr Peter Droussiotis, President of the Federation, said:"We support wholeheartedly current efforts to reunite Cyprus but we have no doubt that Turkey's role is critical to the success of the current negotiations. We call upon the British government to use its influence with Ankara so that Turkey accepts the need for a solution based on principles and European and international law."Haris Sophoclides, President of the Greek Cypriot Brotherhood, called upon the British media to readdress its perspective on the Cyprus problem, reminding attendees of the grave seriousness and personal suffering of the victims of the division of the island. The gathering was also addressed by Andros Kyprianou, General Secretary of AKEL, who conveyed his party's commitment to a solution which will serve the interests of both the Greek Cypriot and the Turkish Cypriot communities and emphasised AKEL's strong support to President's Christofias efforts to deliver a just and lasting settlement.Apart from Baroness Kinnock, the event attracted a large number of Labour people including Lord Neil Kinnock, former Leader of the Labour Party, Ray Collins, General Secretary of the Labour Party, Caroline Flint MP, former Minister for Europe, Mike Gapes MP, Chair of the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, Richard Caborn MP, Andrew Dismore MP, Joan Ryan MP, Andy Love MP, Siobhan McDonagh MP, David Lepper MP, Jim Sheridan MP, Mary Honeyball MEP, former Labour Party General Secretary Lady Margaret McDonagh, Lord Toby Harris, Claire Kober, Leader of Haringey Council, as well numerous Labour councillors including Enfield Cypriot Cllr Bambos Charalambous. The reception was also attended by the Cyprus High Commissioner to the UK, Mr Alexandros Zenon, and his deputy, Mr Demetris Hatziargyrou. ENDS

For more information, please call Tony Sophoclides on 07887 935 335.

Wednesday 16 September 2009

Newpaper letter from Peter Droussiotis

Sir,

Unfortunately, your editorials have become all too predictable in relation to Cyprus (“Engaging Turkey”, 8 September 2009). The Cyprus problem has been reduced to a caricature in which the Greek Cypriots are invariably portrayed as the “ugly bunch”. The next step will be to depict Turkey as the ‘Dove of Peace’ in Cyprus and the re-writing of history will be complete.

Turkey’s role in Cyprus cannot so easily be airbrushed out of the picture though. For more than 35 years, Turkey has defied the will of the international community with impunity in relation to Cyprus. This country has continued to act in breach of numerous United Nations resolutions and the UN Charter and has, similarly, continued to disregard numerous judicial rulings by international courts.

The facts on the ground in Cyprus cannot be swept under the carpet so that Turkey’s European aspirations can advance: for more than 35 years, more than 40,000 Turkish troops have continued to occupy the northern part of the island, a country with a total population of less than a million people. During this period, Turkey has created, in the occupied area, an illegal regime which no one in the world other than Turkey recognises. What is more, the Turkish army has presided over a deliberate policy of colonisation in the area it occupies in order to change the demography of the island. Turkish nationals transferred from Asia Minor to settle land belonging to the legal inhabitants of the island now significantly outnumber indigenous Turkish Cypriots living in the occupied area. During the same period, Cypriot properties in the occupied north have been usurped and are exploited for economic gain, while the cultural and religious heritage of the island in those areas is being actively desecrated and destroyed. Additionally, to his day, Turkey refuses to investigate hundreds of cases of people who went missing during its military invasion, contrary to rulings of the European Court of Human Rights which Turkey blatantly disregards.

I am pragmatic enough to know that geostrategic and economic interests colour your judgment in this matter, but the truth is that the Cyprus problem could relatively easily be resolved on the basis of European and international law provided that Turkey changes its intransigent and anachronistic position. A reunited and democratic homeland without armies of occupation and lines of division, in which all Cypriots can live as free European citizens without the fear of foreign military intervention by an aggressive neighbour, is the only sensible way forward and the best incentive that can be offered to both communities on the island.

I have always been supportive of Turkey’s eventual membership of the European Union as have the governments of the UK, Greece and Cyprus but this cannot happen for as long as Turkey does not abide by its obligations to the Union. The reunification of Cyprus and Turkey’s acceptance of a truly independent and reunited Cyprus are prerequisites to Turkish entry and would do more to facilitate this than any other single factor. The benefits which would flow from this scenario would be huge for all interested parties and for the entire region.

Peter Droussiotis
Federation President
Britannia Road, London N12 9RU
www.cypriotfederation.org.uk