Cypriot refugees

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Cypriot refugees are those Cypriot nationals or Cyprus residents who had their main residence (as opposed to merely owning property) in an area forcibly evacuated during the Cyprus conflict, as well as their descendants on the male line (fathers pass on their refugee status to their children regardless of their place of birth).[citation needed]

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[edit] 1963-74 background

Tension began in 1963 when Makarios proposed thirteen amendments to the constitution of the Republic of Cyprus. Turkish Cypriots were opposed to the proposal since they viewed it as an attempt to remove their constitutional safeguards which Greek Cypriots had claimed to be problematic in the conduct of government. On 21 December 1963, clashes between Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots erupted unleashed a wave of violence across the island. Facing violence from Greek Cypriot paramilitaries in favour of unification with Greece (Enosis), thousands of Turkish Cypriots fled their properties to enclaves with Turkish Cypriot majorities, protected from Turkish troops. By 1974, an attempted coup sponsored by the military junta then ruling Greece, with the aim of overthrowing the Cypriot government and uniting the island with Greece, was met with a military invasion of the island by Turkey, which claimed it was acting as a guarantor power to prevent annexation of the island. Turkey's subsequent decades-long occupation of northern Cyprus has attracted widespread international condemnation.

[edit] Post-1974

Turkey in 1974 advanced to occupy ~38% of the island in the north of the Republic of Cyprus and thus transforming into reality the Turkish Cypriot objective of Taksim (partition of the island of Cyprus into Turkish and Greek portions, a concept declared as early as 1957 by Dr. Fazil Küçük). Greek Cypriots in the north (nearly half the Greek Cypriot population of the island) were forced by the advancing Turkish Army to flee south. Likewise, Turkish Cypriots who had not already fled to the enclaves during the intercommunal violence now chose to do so. It is estimated that 40% of the Greek population of Cyprus, as well as over half of the Turkish Cypriot population, were displaced by the Turkish invasion. The figures for internally displaced Cypriots varies, the United Peacekeeping force in Cyprus (UNFICYP) estimates 165,000 Greek Cypriots and 45,000 Turkish Cypriots. The UNHCR registers slightly higher figures of 200,000 and 65,000 respectively, being partly based on official Cypriot statistics which register children of displaced families as refugees.[1] On August 2, 1975 the two parties reached in Vienna the Voluntary Exchange of Population Agreement, implemented under United Nations auspices. In accordance with this Agreement, Turkish Cypriots remaining in the South moved to the North and Greek Cypriots remaining in the North moved to the South with the exception of a few hundred Greek Cypriots who chose to reside in the North [2]. After that the separation of the two communities via the UN patrolled Green Line prohibited the return of all internally displaced people.

By 1983 the Turkish Cypriots made a unilateral declaration of independence, proclaiming the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, to be recognized only by Turkey. A number of Greek Cypriots therefore chose to take their case to the European Court of Human Rights filing against Turkey, arguing their homes are being occuped by migrant workers brought from Turkey with the intention of altering the demographics of the island.

Through the years multiple demonstrations and rallies have been made by the Greek Cypriots demanding to return to their properties, such as the 1996 demonstration ending in the death of Anastasios (Tasos) Isaak and Solomos Solomou and a further 41 injured, leading to much condemnation of Turkey's conduct. Other demonstrations had been orchestrated by Greek Cypriot women, several thousand attempting to return to their homes and properties in 1989 without success.[citation needed]

Neither the Greek or Turkish Cypriot displaced populations are considered to be in any need of humanitarian aid. The Greek Cypriot government had instituted a program of housing and aid for the displaced. This housing programme was giving Turkish Cypruot refugee's properties to the displaced Greek Cypriots. They were also benefitting from the boom in tourism across the south of the island. Turkish Cypriot relief came mainly in the form of economic aid from Turkey as well as the allocation of formerly Greek Cypriot owned houses and property. Both sides had the same housing programme, taking use of the abandoned properties. [1]

In April 2003, owing to dissatisfaction with his policies both domestically and internationally, the hardline Turkish Cypriot President Rauf Denktaş opened the border crossing for the first time since the island was divided, allowing both Greek and Turkish Cypriots to view their property since the separation of the two communities. Crossing procedures have since been relaxed allowing Cypriots from both communities to move relatively freely across the island.

It was hoped Cyprus's accession to the European Union would provide an impetus for reunficiation of the island and in 2004 the UN backed Annan plan was put into referendum for both sides of the island. The plan envisaged a bicommunal, bizonal, federal state, with territorial concessions by the Turkish Cypriot state but only a limited right of return for displaced Greek Cypriots. The plan was accepted by the Turkish Cypriot, but rejected by Greek Cypriots. Cyprus subsequently entered the EU as a divided island. A new talks round was initiated in 2008 between the leaders of the two Cypriot communities, Dimitris Christofias and Mehmet Ali Talat.

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