
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: GEORGIA ECONOMOU |
April 26,
2004—No.33 |
(202)
785-8430 |
AHI Statement on the Annan Plan Vote
WASHINGTON, DC—On April 26, 2004, AHI President, Gene Rossides, made the following
statement on the Annan Plan vote:
Cyprus—The Conscience of the West
The 75.9 percent vote of the 80 percent Greek Cypriot majority of Cyprus
of a "no" to the Annan Plan is a vote for the rule of law and for what is right. By that
vote, Cyprus has become the conscience of the West on the rule
of law.
The Annan Plan has many flaws—a leading flaw is its violation
of the rule of law. There are several examples:
- Colonists/settlers—The Geneva Convention of 1949, section III,
article 49, prohibits colonization by an occupying power. Section
III of the Geneva Convention
deals with Occupied Territories. Article 49 states in its last paragraph: "The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population
into the territory it occupies." Today there are reported estimates of over 100,000 illegal Turkish colonists
in Cyprus.
The Annan Plan is in violation of the Geneva Convention in not
calling for the return to Turkey of all illegal colonists.
- Turkish aggression
and the UN Charter—Turkey’s use of military force to invade and
occupy 37.3 percent of Cyprus directly violated the plain meaning
of
the Preamble
of the United Nations Charter, Article 1, paragraph 1 on the purposes
of the UN Charter and Article 2, paragraph 4 of the UN Charter which
reads:
All
members
shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or
use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence
of any
state, or
in any other manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the United
Nations.
Sir David Hunt, former British High Commissioner in Cyprus,
stated in the 1980 Montague Burton Lecture on International Relations
in Edinburgh
University:
"But the rule of law, as both philosophers and practical
statesmen agree, can only be established when there are institutions
to formulate
it
and maintain it. Almost as essential is for it to be universally
recognized. These conditions
have now prevailed for thirty-five years. The basis of international
law is
formulated in the Charter of the United Nations; and the same
document provides for the organs to enforce it. All the sovereign
nations
of the
world have
voluntarily undertaken to observe the obligations which the Charter
lays on them: that
disputes are to be settled by peaceful means; that members undertake
not to use force or the threat of force in contravention of the
purposes of
the United
Nations; and that each member must assist the organisation in
any action it takes under the Charter."
* * * * *
[T]here is a rule of law in the world and the guarantee of it
is the United Nations. Applying these principles to the case
of Cyprus
it
is clear and
undeniable that the government of Turkey, by invading with
military force the territory
of the Republic of Cyprus, is in open and deliberate breach
of the Charter.
The Annan Plan is actually in violation of the
UN Charter by its attempt to eliminate Turkey’s responsibility
for her
1974 aggression
against
Cyprus.
- UN Security Council and General Assembly Resolutions—The Annan Plan is also in
violation of numerous UN Security Council resolutions
which
called
upon
all states to respect the sovereignty, independence,
and territorial integrity of Cyprus and demanded the immediate
end to foreign
intervention and called
for foreign military forces to withdraw without delay
except those authorized by international treaty. The Treaty of
Alliance under
the London-Zurich
agreements of 1959-1960 authorized 960 Greek troops and
650 Turkish troops.
The
unanimous UN General Assembly Resolution 3212 of November
1, 1974 called for the removal of ALL foreign military
forces. On December
13, 1974
the UN Security
Council adopted Resolution 365 endorsing General Assembly
Resolution
3212 of November 1, 1974.
The Annan Plan provided for a
number of Turkish troops to remain with the right of intervention.
The Annan
Plan
thus violated UN Security
Council
and UN General Assembly Resolutions.
- Annan Plans Two
States—The Annan Plan further violated UN Security Council and
General Assembly Resolutions
by abolishing the Republic
of Cyprus and
creating two states on Cyprus.
- Legal Right to
Sue—The Annan Plan actually abrogated the legal right of Greek
Cypriots to sue Turkey in
the European
Court of
Human Rights
for Turkey’s
illegally
taking of their homes and property and Turkey’s
not allowing them the use of their property. It also
required pending
suits to be
withdrawn."
Aggression cannot and will not pay."
The United Nations established a precedent in the 1991 Gulf War that "aggression cannot and will not pay" as stated in a joint statement by President George H.W. Bush and President Mikhail
Gorbachev in Helsinki on September 9, 1990. Yet under
the Annan Plan, Turkey:
- is not required to remove
her 100,000 illegal colonists;
- is not required to pay for the
resettlement of Greek Cypriot refugees;
- is allowed to control
28.5 percent of Cyprus for the 18 percent Turkish Cypriot minority;
- is not required
to pay compensation for illegally occupying Greek Cypriot property
and for
preventing those property
owners from
using their
property. Under the
Annan Plan the Greek Cypriot taxpayer would
be required to pay ninety percent of the
damages caused
by Turkey.
President
Papadopoulos’
comments
President Tassos Papadopoulos in his comments
following the
75.9 percent vote said:
I should emphasize that the Greek
Cypriots have not rejected the solution of the Cyprus problem.
They
are not turning
their backs
on their Turkish
Cypriot
compatriots.
They have simply rejected this particular
solution. . .because, amongst other things, they did
not believe that
this solution
provides the
necessary safeguards
for its full implementation. . .or is the
best for the common interest of Greek Cypriots and
Turkish Cypriots,
ensuring
a
functional and,
therefore, viable solution. The only real beneficiary
of
this plan would have been
Turkey.
We shall work for a bizonal bicommunal
federation as a solution that will meet the hopes and
expectations of both
communities.
He stated that "further to the measures adopted in favour of Turkish Cypriots over the last year,
proof of our intentions are the new measures
of support and economic development of the
Turkish Cypriot compatriots, to the extent
possible and permissible,
in the benefits which our accession to the
European Union will bring."
He called upon "Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots to work together for a united Cyprus;" and that the "referendum must act as a catalyst for unification and not as a pretext for further
division."
He concluded: "We, Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots, deserve a safe future within the European
family, as one country, as the one people
of Cyprus."
"Let right be done"
The theme in a famous British movie, "The Winslow Boy," is "Let right be done." The British bear a heavy responsibility in the months ahead to see to it that
right is done.
Cyprus is the conscience of
the West on the rule of law. It is in the interests
of the
U.S. to
support
the rule
of law
and to support
President
Papadopoulos
in his efforts to unify Cyprus for the
benefit of the people of Cyprus, the Greek and Turkish
Cypriots. ###
For additional information, please contact Vivian Basdekis at (202) 785-8430 or at [email protected]. For general information on AHI, see our
Web site at www.ahiworld.org. Back to top
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