
JERUSALEM POST ARTICLE ON THE FLAWS IN THE ANNAN PLAN FOR CYPRUS WASHINGTON, DC—The AHI brings to your attention an important article which appeared
in the Sunday, February 29, 2004 issue of the Jerusalem Post, by
Shlomo Avineri, Professor of Political Science at the Hebrew University
of Jerusalem and former director-general of the Foreign Ministry.
Feb.
29, 2004
The UN's favorite occupation
By SHLOMO AVINERI
On May 1, 2004, Cyprus will join
the European Union. The island has been divided since the Turkish
invasion
in 1974, with
a Turkish puppet regime in the North. For decades, futile negotiations
have been going on for reunification.
Despite this, the European
Union has decided that Cyprus will be admitted in any case:
If reunification
occurs before accession, the whole island will join the EU;
if negotiations fail, only the Greek part, represented by the legitimate
Republic
of Cyprus, will become a member. In such a case the current
Green
Line dividing Cyprus—and running through Nicosia—will also
become the external border of the EU.
This, of course, raises
a number of
serious concerns for the EU. Hence its support for the UN-sponsored
Annan Plan, aimed at reuniting the island before May 1, has
now gone into high gear, with intensive talks taking place between
the two
sides under UN sponsorship, with the blessing of the EU.
The
Annan
Plan is a 400-page document. Few people in Cyprus have read it, despite the fact that both communities will have to vote on it before May
1. In typical UN arrogance, it has not been translated into either
Greek or Turkish, so most people have only a vague idea of what
is in it.
But despite its promise to end the division of the island
by
setting up a complex loose federal system, a poll released
last week suggests that in the Cypriot Greek community 61 percent
oppose it,
while only 27 percent support it.
Why such meager support
for
what promises finally to bring peace to the island? The
answers are in
the details.
Many Greek Cypriots feel that the haste now
evident by the UN and the EU stems from the wish to pave the way
for talks about
the accession of Turkey to the EU. Obviously, if Turkey
continued to occupy part of an EU member state, negotiations about
its membership could not begin.
GREECE ITSELF has now—wisely—dropped
its opposition
to Turkish EU membership. Looking at the details of
the Annan Plan, however, it appears that the international community,
through its wish to pave Turkey's accession, will be legitimating the outcome of Turkish
aggression. It is obvious that the Annan Plan contradicts
some basic values of both the United Nations and the European
Union:
Most
of
the 200,000 Greek Cypriot refuges who were uprooted
by the Turkish invasion will not be able to return to their
former places, nor
will they receive full compensation; Most of the Anatolian
Turks who have
been settled in the North by the Turkish occupation
authorities will remain in place; Until Turkish accession to
the EU, Turkish
forces
will remain in the North; Greek Cypriots will not be
able to move freely or settle in the Turkish part.
The last
prohibition
rattles
Greek Cypriots most: It means that in a united Europe
- where every French, Portuguese, Polish or Estonian citizen
will be
more or less
free to take up residence and work in the Turkish part
of Cyprus—Greek Cypriots will not have freedom of movement
in their own
country. In a way, the Greek Cypriots will be ghettoized.
Furthermore,
the provisions regarding Turkish settlers and the continued presence of the Turkish
army will mean that Turkish aggression has been rewarded.
The
UN and the EU, which justly condemn Israeli occupation
and settlements in
the West Bank, now condones Turkish occupation
and Turkish settlers.
If the negotiations prove successful, Kofi Annan may get the Nobel Peace Prize
for an agreement which legitimizes ethnic cleansing and occupation.
As always, the gap between the lofty ideals of the UN and the sleazy
way in which it goes about its business could not be wider.
Many Greek
Cypriots feel that they are being bludgeoned into submission in
order to appease a much stronger Turkey. They may be exaggerating;
but
if the negotiations fail because of the Greek Cypriots' feeling
of being, once again, victimized by realpolitik, they will not be
totally
wrong.
The writer is Professor of Political Science at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem and former director-general of the Foreign
Ministry.
For additional information, please contact
Angeliki Vassiliou at (202) 785-8430 or at [email protected]. For general information
on AHI, see our Web site at www.ahiworld.org.
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