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- <text id=93CT1660>
- <title>
- Cyprus--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- Southwest Asia
- Cyprus
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Cypriot recorded history dates to the late Bronze Age
- (1600-1050 B.C.), when Greek traders and settlers landed and
- established a Hellenic culture. Beginning in 700 B.C., the
- island fell successively under Assyrian, Egyptian, and Persian
- domination. In 58 B.C., Rome annexed Cyprus. With the division
- of the Roman Empire in A.D. 364, Cyprus was incorporated into
- Byzantium. During 800 years of Byzantine rule, Cyprus was
- attacked frequently. After brief possession by Richard the
- Lion-Hearted, the island came under Frankish control in the late
- 12th century. It was ceded to the Venetian Republic in 1489 and
- conquered by the Ottoman Turks in 1571. The Ottomans applied the
- millet system to Cyprus, under which non-Muslim minorities were
- governed by their religious authorities. This system reinforced
- the position of the church and the cohesion of the ethnic Greek
- population. Most of the Turks who settled on the island during
- the three centuries of Ottoman rule remained when control of
- Cyprus (although not sovereignty) was ceded to Great Britain in
- 1878. Many, however, left for Turkey during the 1920s. The
- island was annexed formally by Great Britain in 1914 at the
- outbreak of World War I and became a crown colony in 1925.
- </p>
- <p> Revolt Against British Rule
- </p>
- <p> During the later years of Ottoman rule, a strong sense of
- Greek identity and a desire for union with Greece (enosis)
- emerged within the Greek Cypriot community. These sentiments
- intensified under British colonial administration and
- translated ultimately into political action. Riots broke out in
- 1931. The British declared a state of emergency. Agitation for
- enosis subsided during World War II but resumed after the war.
- In 1955, the Greek Cypriot EOKA (National Organization of
- Cypriot Fighters) launched a guerrilla campaign against British
- rule, while Greek Cypriot political leaders, principally
- Archbishop Makarios, brought their cause before the United
- Nations and other international bodies. Turkish Cypriots
- objected to union with Greece and called for partition of the
- island. EOKA's anti-British campaign led to outbreaks of
- intercommunal violence.
- </p>
- <p> The Greek Government endorsed Greek Cypriot claims to
- majority rule and self-determination. The Turkish Government,
- however, pointing out that application of these principles would
- lead to enosis, contented that Turkey's national interests and
- the security of the Turkish Cypriots would require partitioning
- the island between Greece and Turkey should the British decide
- to relinquish control. These differences strained relations
- between the United Kingdom, Greece, and Turkey.
- </p>
- <p> Independence
- </p>
- <p> Under the circumstances, the concept of an independent
- Cyprus gained currency. At a meeting in Zurich in February 1959,
- the prime ministers of Greece and Turkey endorsed Cypriot
- independence and agreed on the fundamental structure of an
- independent republic. Later that month, representatives of the
- United Kingdom and the Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities
- joined those of Greece and Turkey at the followup conference in
- London, where the Zurich agreement was ratified by all
- participants, and arrangements were made to draft a
- constitution and associated agreements.
- </p>
- <p> On August 16, 1960, Cyprus became independent. On the same
- day, the constitution and a series of treaties involving the
- United Kingdom, Greece, Turkey, and the new republic went into
- effect. The treaties prohibited both enosis and partition of
- the island between Greece and Turkey, and established Greece,
- Turkey, and the United Kingdom and guarantors of Cypriot
- independence, territorial integrity, security, and the
- republic's constitution. The treaties also reserved to the
- guarantors the right to take collective or individual action to
- fulfill the obligations, and provided for tripartite Cypriot,
- Greek, and Turkish defense of the island. Under the Treaty of
- Establishment, the United Kingdom retained sovereignty over two
- base areas on the island--Akrotiri and Dhekelia.
- </p>
- <p> Shortly after the founding of the republic, serious
- differences arose between Greek and Turkish Cypriots over the
- implementation and interpretation of the constitution. Problems
- developed over forming a national army, staffing the public
- services, and legislating customs duties and an income tax. In
- 1962, friction arose over implementation of the constitution's
- provision for separate Turkish Cypriot municipalities. Internal
- discussions aimed at resolving these differences broke down in
- mid-1963. In November, President Makarios proposed a series of
- constitutional revisions that would have eliminated the special
- protections accorded the Turkish Cypriots in the 1960
- constitution and would have introduced a straightforward
- majority system of representation. The Turkish Cypriots resisted
- these revisions and, after an outbreak of intercommunal violence
- in December, terminated participation in the Government of
- Cyprus.
- </p>
- <p> Crises of 1963-64 and 1967
- </p>
- <p> Intercommunal fighting continued through 1964, with the
- attendant danger of hostilities between Greece and Turkey.
- Initially, British troops stationed in the sovereign base areas
- sought to establish and enforce a ceasefire, but when these
- efforts failed, the UN Security Council considered the matter,
- and by a resolution of March 4, 1964, recommended the creation
- of a UN peace force in Cyprus, UNFICYP (UN Peacekeeping Force
- in Cyprus) continues to exist, 23 years after its creation. The
- March 1964 resolution also authorized the UN Secretary General
- to designate a mediator to promote a peaceful, mutually
- acceptable settlement of the Cyprus problem.
- </p>
- <p> In early 1964, the United States first became actively
- involved in the Cyprus question when Under Secretary of State
- George W. Ball traveled to the eastern Mediterranean in an
- effort to dampen intercommunal tensions and to lessen the risks
- of open Greek-Turkish conflict. In June, when it appeared that
- Turkey was preparing to invade Cyprus, President Lyndon B.
- Johnson sent a strongly worded letter to Turkish Prime Minister
- Ismet Inonu warning against such a step. Later in 1964, former
- Secretary of State Dean Acheson put forward two proposed
- solutions to the Cyprus problem involving union with Greece in
- exchange for establishment of a Turkish base on the island and
- cession of a Greek island to Turkey. These proposals were
- rejected by Greece and Turkey and by President Makarios. In
- March 1965, the UN- appointed mediator, Galo Plaza, submitted
- a report to Secretary General U Thant containing recommendations
- for a settlement; these were found unacceptable by the Turkish
- side.
- </p>
- <p> During the violence of 1963-64 and 1967-68, many Turkish
- Cypriots moved to areas of the island that were wholly or
- predominantly Turkish Cypriot, leading to the creation of small
- but relatively homogeneous Turkish Cypriot enclaves with their
- own local administrative apparatus and security forces.
- Meanwhile, the Government of Cyprus began functioning in
- practice as a purely Greek Cypriot institution, and certain
- Greek Cypriot communal bodies established under the constitution
- were abolished. After 1964, the Turkish Cypriots increasingly
- depended on assistance from the Turkish Government, and both
- Greece and Turkey augmented their military contingents on the
- island to levels substantially above those permitted under the
- 1960 Treaty of Alliance.
- </p>
- <p> The 1967 intercommunal violence precipitated a further
- crisis on Cyprus and led to a major confrontation between Greece
- and Turkey. Following an attack in November by the Greek
- Cypriot National Guard on two Turkish Cypriot villagers, Turkey
- moved large numbers of troops to the Thracian border with Greece
- and to ports on the southern Turkish coast facing Cyprus. Within
- several weeks, however, the crisis was defused, largely through
- the mediation of U.S. Presidential Emissary Cyrus Vance. Greece
- and Turkey agreed to withdraw from Cyprus all armed forces in
- excess of the levels permitted under the Treaty of Alliance.
- Subsequently, the Turkish military buildup in Thrace and on the
- southern Turkish coast dispersed. Additionally, Gen. Grivas,
- the Cypriot-born mainland Greek officer who had led the EOKA
- insurgency and had commanded the Greek Cypriot National Guard
- since its formation in 1964, resigned his command and returned
- to Greece. In the wake of the 1967 crisis, the Turkish Cypriot
- leadership set up a Turkish Cypriot Provisional Administration,
- headed by an 11-person council, to manage the community's
- affairs.
- </p>
- <p> The 1974 Crisis
- </p>
- <p> On July 15, 1974, elements of the Cypriot National Guard and
- an extremist group calling itself EOKA-B, at the instigation of
- the junta-controlled Government of Greece, overthrew President
- Makarios and his government. The junta had been hostile to
- Makarios for alleged pro-communist leanings, and both the junta
- and EOKA-B refused to accept what they perceived as Makarios'
- abandonment of enosis. Makarios fled the island in the midst of
- heavy fighting among Greek Cypriot factions on July 15-16, and
- Nicos Sampson, a newspaper publisher and EOKA-B leader, assumed
- control of the government. Sampson's past involvement in
- terrorism in support of enosis made him totally unacceptable to
- the Turkish Cypriot community and to Turkey. On July 20, the
- Turkish Government, citing its obligations under the 1960
- Treaty of Guarantee, landed military forces on Cyprus and heavy
- fighting ensued. A quickly arranged ceasefire came into effect
- on July 22. On July 23, the Sampson regime collapsed, and
- Glafcos Clerides, President of the House of Representatives,
- became acting president.
- </p>
- <p> The foreign ministers of the guarantor powers (Greece,
- Turkey, and the United Kingdom) met in Geneva July 25-30 in an
- effort to consolidate the cease-fire. They convened a second
- time on August 8, against a background of cease-fire violations,
- massacres, and widespread arrests, to attempt to work out a
- long-term settlement of Cyprus. The talks broke down on August
- 14, and on the same day, Turkish forces launched a second
- offensive that ended 2 days later with their occupation of 36%
- of the island. More than 160,000 Greek Cypriots were displaced
- during this Turkish advance. Some 65,000 Turkish Cypriots also
- left the Greek Cypriot-controlled part of the island and moved
- to the park under Turkish occupation. After 5 months abroad,
- President Makarios returned to Cyprus in December 1974.
- </p>
- <p> Settlement Efforts
- </p>
- <p> Efforts have been made almost since the founding of the
- republic to develop long-term institutional arrangements in
- Cyprus acceptable to both communities that would permit
- effective, stable government. Initially, these efforts were ad
- hoc consultations between Greek and Turkish involvement. In
- June 1968, formal intercommunal negotiations began under UN
- auspices. These sessions were sporadic, however, and little
- progress was made before the 1974 crisis. With strong diplomatic
- support, the talks resumed more intensively in early 1975, but
- despite limited agreements on certain humanitarian issues--such as population movement--the two sides made no substantive
- progress. In their Brussels Agreement of December 1975, the
- Greek and Turkish foreign ministers sought to stimulate the
- talks, and hopes rose in February 1976 when the two parties
- agreed to exchange substantive proposals on all aspects of the
- Cyprus problem. Each side, however, rejected the other's
- proposals.
- </p>
- <p> In February 1977, President Makarios and Turkish Cypriot
- leader Denktash met in Nicosia under UN Secretary General Kurt
- Waldheim's aegis and agreed on a set of general principles to
- guide further negotiations. Shortly after the Makarios-Denktash
- meeting, U.S. Special Representative Clark Clifford visited
- Ankara, Athens, and Nicosia and obtained the agreement of both
- sides to submit new, concrete proposals at the talks--the
- Greek Cypriots on territory, the Turkish Cypriots on
- constitutional issues. Some probing of positions took place in
- the discussions that followed, but followup sessions in May and
- June quickly bogged down. Efforts to revive the talks made
- little headway until January 1978 when Prime Minister Ecevit
- returned to power in Ankara and announced that the Turkish side
- would formulate and put forward new territorial and
- constitutional proposals. In April of that year, the proposals
- were presented to Secretary General Waldheim in Vienna but were
- rejected immediately by the Greek Cypriots as an insufficient
- basis for resuming negotiations. In July, within the context of
- the U.S. congressional debate on lifting the Turkish arms
- embargo, Turkish Cypriot leader Denktash offered to permit Greek
- Cypriot resettlement of the empty coastal town of Varosha as an
- inducement for new talks. This proposal also was rejected by
- the Greek Cypriots.
- </p>
- <p> In the fall of 1978, the United States, in conjunction with
- the United Kingdom and Canada, undertook a quiet diplomatic
- effort to facilitate a resumption of negotiations. On November
- 10, a series of proposals on substantive issues designed to
- serve as a starting point for new talks was submitted to the
- two Cypriot parties. Neither party accepted these suggestions,
- and they were specifically rejected by the Greek Cypriots.
- Secretary General Waldheim, however, drew on them and presented
- a simplified draft agenda to the parties late in December.
- </p>
- <p> On May 18-19, 1979, under the auspices of the Secretary
- General, President Kyprianou met with Turkish Cypriot leader
- Denktash. On the basis of a 10-point agreement reached by them,
- the intercommunal negotiations resumed briefly in June but then
- went into an extended recess. Coinciding with the appointment
- of a new Special Representative of the Secretary General,
- Ambassador Hugo Gobbi, the sides agreed in a settlement on
- August 9, 1980, to renew the intercommunal talks. As well as
- confirming the February 1977 and May 1979 agreements, the
- statement reaffirmed support for a federal constitution and a
- bizonal solution of the territorial aspect of the Cyprus
- problem.
- </p>
- <p> In November 1981, the United Nations presented an
- "evaluation" of the negotiations to help generate deeper
- substantive discussion. The "evaluation" served as the basis
- for talks into early 1983. In August 1983, Secretary General
- Perez de Cuellar proposed "parameters" within which the Cypriot
- communities could resolve the key issues of governmental
- organization and division of territory. These proposals were
- accepted as a basis for discussion by the Greek Cypriots a
- month later but were rejected by the Turkish Cypriots. A
- Turkish Cypriot proposal for a high-level meeting to break the
- deadlock failed to renew momentum.
- </p>
- <p> On November 15, 1983, the Turkish Cypriot community declared
- itself the independent "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus."
- This action was immediately denounced by the internationally
- recognized Government of Cyprus, the United States, and most
- other countries. The UN Security Council met in a special
- emergency session to deplore this move by the Turkish Cypriots,
- and adopted a resolution calling for its reversal. The United
- States supported the Council resolution and joined many of its
- allies in urging the Turkish Government, the only government to
- recognize the new entity, to use its influence to reverse the
- Turkish Cypriot action.
- </p>
- <p> In August 1984, Secretary General Perez de Cuellar launched
- a new initiative to achieve an overall Cyprus settlement.
- Following three rounds of proximity talks, he developed a "draft
- framework agreement" providing the outline of an overall
- settlement and an agreed procedure for high-level meetings and
- working groups to resolve outstanding issues. He presented the
- draft agreement to both sides at a summit under his aegis on
- January 17-20, 1985. The summit failed to produce agreement,
- however; the Turkish Cypriots accepted the document, but the
- Greek Cypriots would only accept the draft as a basis for
- negotiations. Subsequently, after further discussions with the
- Greek Cypriots, the Secretary General converted his
- documentation into a draft agreement and statement. The Greek
- Cypriots accepted this documentation in April 1985. In August,
- however, the Turkish Cypriot side informed the Secretary General
- that it had difficulties with the documentation.
- </p>
- <p> Following lower level talks between Secretariat officials
- and the two parties, the Secretary General produced a new draft
- framework agreement in March 1986. After some initial
- qualifications, Mr. Denktash accepted the document. President
- Kyprianou did not accept the draft agreement and told the
- Secretary General that priority should be given to discussing
- the withdrawal of Turkish troops and settlers, international
- guarantees, and the application of the "three freedoms"
- (freedom of movement, freedom of settlement, and right of
- property). He requested that an international conference be
- convened to deal with the first two issues or, if this did not
- prove possible, that the Secretary General convene a meeting of
- the two Cypriot leaders to deal with all three issues. The
- Secretary General is continuing his efforts in the search for
- a peaceful, mutually acceptable settlement.
- </p>
- <p>Political Conditions
- </p>
- <p> There are four major Greek Cypriot political parties--the
- conservative Democratic Rally, the center-right Democratic
- Party, socialist EDEK, and communist AKEL. None has been able
- to elect a president by itself or dominate the 56-seat House of
- Representatives.
- </p>
- <p> Spyros Kyprianou, Democratic Party leader, became President
- after Makarios' death in 1977. Kyprianou originally succeeded
- to the presidency, according to constitutional provisions, from
- his position as President of the House of Representatives, and
- was elected for an interim period and re-elected without
- opposition for a full term in February 1978. In 1983, Kyprianou
- entered into an electoral alliance with AKEL and won a second
- 5-year term over Democratic Rally leader Glafkos Clerides and
- EDEK leader Vassos Lyssarides, obtaining 56% of the vote.
- </p>
- <p> Presidential elections were held in February 1988, resulting
- in the defeat of President Kyprianou after 10 years in office.
- In the February 14 first round of elections, no candidate
- received a majority, resulting in a runoff election between
- Democratic Rally Party candidate Glafkos Clerides and
- Independent candidate George Vassiliou. First round voting
- percentages were Spyros Kyprianou 27.29%, Glafkos Clerides
- 33.32%, Vassos Lyssarides 9.22%, George Vassiliou 30.11%, and
- Independent Thrassos Georghiades 0.06%. Vassiliou won in
- February 21 second round with 51.63% of the votes over Clerides'
- 48.37%.
- </p>
- <p> Vassiliou ran as an Independent but was supported by AKEL
- and the small Liberal Party of Former Foreign Minister Nicos
- Rolandis in the first round. In the second round, he also picked
- up the support of Lyssarides and EDEK. Vassiliou had no previous
- direct involvement in Cypriot politics. He established the
- Middle East Marketing Research Bureau in 1962 and the Middle
- East Centre for Management Studies and the Middle East Centre
- for Computing Studies in 1984.
- </p>
- <p> In the December 1985 parliamentary elections, the Democratic
- Rally won 33.56%, the Democratic Party 27.6%, AKEL declined
- from its traditional one-third to 27.4%, and EDEK won 11.07% of
- the vote. EDEK leader Lyssarides--with Democratic Party
- support--was elected to the presidency of the House of
- Representatives.
- </p>
- <p> In the May 1986 municipal elections, AKEL rebounded with
- 32.53% of the vote, the Rally won 32.59%, the Democratic Party,
- 23.4%, and EDEK 11.14%.
- </p>
- <p> The Turkish Cypriots last held parallel elections with the
- Greek Cypriots in 1973, when Rauf Denktash, then intercommunal
- negotiator for the Turkish Cypriot side, was elected without
- opposition as the Vice President of Cyprus. Since the 1974
- hostilities and the formation of the TFSC, however, the Turkish
- Cypriots regard the constitutional order of 1960 as abolished.
- </p>
- <p> Following the November 1983 declaration of independence,
- Denktash appointed a Council of Ministers for the self-
- proclaimed "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC)." On May
- 5, 1985, a referendum was held on a new constitution that
- received the approval of 70% of the voting electorate. The June
- 1985 assembly elections were fought under a new electoral law
- in which only parties winning at least 8% of the vote could win
- seats. Under this law, the center-right National Unity Party
- won 24 of the Assembly's 50 seats, the Marxist Republican
- Turkish Party won 12, and the leftist Communal Liberation Party,
- 10. The New Dawn Party, whose supporters consisted almost
- entirely of Turkish mainland settlers, won four seats. An
- NUP-CLP coalition was formed, with NUP leader Dervish Eroglu as
- prime minister. This government fell in August 1986 over an
- economic policy dispute and was succeeded by an NUP-NDP
- coalition, also headed by Eroglu.
- </p>
- <p> Political Dynamics
- </p>
- <p> The 165,000 Greek Cypriot refugees constitute a potent
- political force. They strongly support a Cyprus settlement that
- would permit them to return to homes and properties in northern
- Cyprus. The government has taken extraordinary and generally
- effective measures to ease the refugees' situation. With
- international (largely U.S.) assistance, the government has
- constructed large housing tracts, made cash payments to the
- needy, and provided health care and vocational education. A
- second significant political force among the Greek Cypriots is
- the Orthodox Church of Cyprus, an independent branch of Greek
- Orthodoxy. Traditionally, the Archbishop of the Cypriot Church
- has been the "ethnarch," or leader, of the Orthodox community,
- exercising broad influence in temporal as well as
- ecclesiastical matters. Makarios formally combined the roles of
- president and archbishop; his religious successor, Chrysostomos,
- wields less political influence.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
- April 1988.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-