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NICOSIA: Garoyian: Non Punishment Of Turkey'S Armenian Genocide Incr

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  • NICOSIA: Garoyian: Non Punishment Of Turkey'S Armenian Genocide Incr

    GAROYIAN: NON PUNISHMENT OF TURKEY'S ARMENIAN GENOCIDE INCREASES INTRANSIGENCE

    Cyprus News Agency
    May 10 2011

    Nicosia, May 10 (CNA) -President of the House of Representatives
    Marios Garoyian has stressed the responsibilities of the international
    community as regards Turkey's crime -the Armenian Genocide -saying
    that if Turkey had been punished for that crime, the Turkish invasion
    against Cyprus may not had taken place.

    Describing Turkey as "an international terrorist", he called upon
    Ankara to admit its crime and apologize to humanity for it.

    "If Turkey had been punished for its enormous crime -the Armenian
    Genocide of 1915 -the Turkish invasion against Cyprus may not have
    taken place", he stressed, addressing Tuesday a school event entitled
    "Armenian Genocide -from the past to the present".

    Garoyian underlined the responsibilities of the international
    community, saying that the Armenian Genocide must be condemned and
    recognized by all and called upon Turkey to admit its crime and
    apologize to the Armenian people and all humanity.

    Unfortunately, he went on to add, the non punishment of Turkey by the
    international community increases Ankara's intransigence and described
    Turkey as "an international terrorist, who, through military power,
    attempts to impose its rules on its neighbours and non neighbours".

    "As long as Turkey remains unpunished, the international community
    has no right to be proud of today's world order", he stressed, adding
    "the international community should feel as an accomplice as long as
    the Armenian Genocide and other ethnic cleansing crimes of Turkey,
    remain unpunished".

    He recalled that Cyprus was the first country to raise the issue
    in the 1960s' before the UN General Assembly, asking for an
    international condemnation of the crime and said that the Cypriot
    House of Representatives as well as the Greek Parliament were among
    the first parliaments to have condemned it.

    "Greek Cypriots have a common historic course with the Armenian
    people. Both being victims of the Turkish barbarity, they have
    experienced the policy of ethnic cleansing of Young Turks", he
    continued.

    Garoyian reassured that Greek Cypriots and Armenians will never stop
    struggling and demanding the restoration of the historic truth and
    Turkey's punishment.

    He also said that in the recent years more and more Parliaments and
    states recognize and condemn the Armenian Genocide.

    Referring to Turkey's stance on the issue, he said that until today,
    Ankara insists that the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Armenians
    was nothing else but the result of the First World War.

    "But the Armenian Genocide was one of the worst crimes of last century
    since it was the first ethnic cleansing crime of Turkey, a country
    which has committed the worst ethnic cleansing crimes, the victims
    of which have been the Pontian Greeks and other Greeks of Minor Asia,
    the Kurds and in 1974 the Greeks of Cyprus".

    "Surely Turkey will carry this great moral burden of the Armenian
    Genocide and its responsibility and guilt will be heavy, despite any
    efforts to approach Armenia", he concluded.

    Turkey invaded Cyprus in the summer of 1974. In a two-phase invasion
    in July and August, and despite calls by the UN Security Council and
    the quick restoration of constitutional order on the island, Turkey
    occupied 36,2 per cent of the sovereign territory of the Republic
    and forcibly expelled about 180.000 Greek Cypriots from their homes.

    Another 20.000 Greek Cypriots, who remained in the occupied areas,
    were also forced to eventually abandon their homes and seek refuge
    in the safety of the government controlled areas. Today, fewer than
    500 enclaved Greek Cypriots remain in the occupied areas.

    The Republic of Cyprus became a full EU member state in May 2004
    and the whole of its territory -including the occupied areas -are
    considered part of the EU, according to Protocol 10 of the Cyprus
    -EU Accession Treaty.

    In the second half of 2012 the Republic of Cyprus will assume the
    six-monthly EU rotating Presidency.

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