
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: GEORGIA ECONOMOU |
April 27,
2004—No.34 |
(202)
785-8430 |
AHI Letter Responds to New York Times Editorial
WASHINGTON, DC—On April 27, 2004, AHI President, Gene Rossides, submitted a letter
to the editor responding to a New York Times editorial titled, "A Destructive Vote in Cyprus" (April 27, 2004; Page A24). The text of the letter appears below, followed by
the New York Times editorial to which the letter responds.
April 27, 2004
Letters to the Editor
The New York Times
229 West 43rd Street
New York, NY 10036
Email: [email protected]
To the Editor:
The editorial (4-27-04) on the UN plan for Cyprus misses
the mark. The Greek Cypriot vote of 75.9 percent against the
plan was a vote for the rule of law which that plan violated on a
number
of
key points.
The UN plan wiped out Turkey’s brutal aggression
in 1974 which violated the UN Charter. The European Commission
on Human
Rights found Turkey guilty of the "killing of innocent civilians. . .on a substantial scale. . .the rape of
women of all ages from 12 to 71," and "creating more than 170,000 Greek Cypriot refugees."
The UN plan allows most of the 100,000 illegal Turkish
colonists to remain in violation of the Geneva Convention
which prohibits colonization
by the occupying power. It allows a number of Turkish troops
to remain with the right of intervention. It penalizes the
Greek Cypriot
property
owners and perpetuates ethnic divisions. The double standard
on the rule of law for Turkey is harmful to U.S. interests.
The
Greek Cypriot vote was not "destructive" as asserted. It was a vote for the rule of law and a functional and viable solution.
It was a vote against rewarding the Turkish aggressor and
punishing the Greek Cypriot victims. That vote made Cyprus the conscience
of
the West on the rule of law.
Gene Rossides,
President, American
Hellenic Institute and
former Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury
The New York Times
A Destructive Vote in Cyprus
Tuesday, April 27, 2004; Page A24
The overwhelming vote by Greek Cypriots
on Saturday to reject the United Nations' reunification plan for
their divided island was destructive but hardly a surprise. The
Greek majority on Cyprus had made no secret of its distaste for the
plan,
largely because of limits on the number of Greeks who would be
able to reclaim the property they lost when Turkey invaded the northern
part of the island in 1974. The United States and the European
Union
had hoped they could overcome that resistance through political
pressure. But the hard fact is that the Greek Cypriots knew their
government
would be joining the E.U. on May 1 as "Cyprus," with or without a deal with the Turkish north. The only way to restore any chance
for reunification now is for the E.U. and the United States to
get tough, by lifting economic sanctions on the Turkish north and
sharply
limiting aid to the Greek south.
Both Turkey and Greece supported
the efforts of the U.N. secretary general, Kofi Annan, to forge
a compromise; Turkey's
prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was especially courageous.
But the
reactionary leaders of both sides of the island campaigned hard
against the U.N. plan, and Mr. Annan couldn't overcome the Greek
Cypriots'
conviction that they had no need to give away so much. Under
the Annan plan, the share of the land held by the Turks, less than
20 percent of the island's population, would drop, but would
still
be
29 percent.
Among Turkish Cypriots, who have endured international
isolation for 30 years, 65 percent voted in favor. Seventy-five
percent of
the Greek Cypriots voted against. The size of the Greek vote
suggests that it would be futile to hold another referendum
soon. But the
E.U., the U.N. and the United States cannot call it quits.
With Turkey knocking at Europe's door, the division of Cyprus cannot
be left
to fester. That means promptly ending the Turkish north's economic
isolation and expediting the money promised to the north in
the
event of unification. And the E.U. should sharply cut aid to
the south.
That will keep the Turkish Cypriots interested in reunification,
while sending a clear signal to Greek Cypriots that the world
does not tolerate open-ended feuds.
###
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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