TABLE OF CONTENTS

II. NEW POPULATION EXPULSIONS, TURKISH COLONIZATION, AGGRAVATED AND CONTINUING VIOLATIONS (19 MAY 1976 TO 10 FEBRUARY 1983 THE PERIOD COVERED BY THE COMMISSION'S SECOND REPORT)

This second period covers the time when Turkey consolidated her seizure of the territory it occupied. This consolidation phase (implemented by further population expulsion, large scale Anatolian colonization, continued denial of the right of Greek Cypriot refugees to return, and attempts to distribute all Greek Cypriot property) is the backdrop to Cyprus' third application under the European Convention on Human Rights. Obviously these were acts of systematic policy implemented by the Turkish Army and public bodies exercising authority by virtue of Turkey's control of the occupied area. They were not the isolated actions of individuals acting unlawfully. The reality underlying these seven years is that, behind a faade of expressed intention to negotiate a Cyprus solution and to agree on humanitarian arrangements for refugees (with which professed aims Turkey sought to bemuse the international community) she was in fact conducting yet another 'occupation of Cyprus, beginning slowly in early 1976 and escalating from May 1976. This 'occupation was effected by driving the remaining Greek Cypriot population out of the area under Turkey's control, particularly in the Karpass peninsula, the long eastern panhandle of Cyprus. The Karpass population, almost entirely Greek Cypriot, had been cut off by the Turkish Army in its rapid advance to Famagusta and towards Larnaca and had been unable to flee. At first the enclaved Greek Cypriots were de facto kept as hostages until Turkish Cypriots remaining in the Government-controlled area had been sent (pursuant to threats in August 1975 of further Turkish invasion) to be concentrated in the occupied area. However, once Turkish Cypriots had en masse been transferred, Turkey, by official harassment, systematic intimidation and imposition of harsh living conditions, forced about 7,000 Greek Cypriot inhabitants to sign applications to leave the occupied area. By the end of June 1994 the number of enclaved Greek Cypriots was reduced to 520. In parallel with forcing out the remaining Greek Cypriots, Turkey speeded up the process of importing Anatolian colonists from the mainland, settling them primarily in the Karpass and near Famagusta.
By 1983, at least 35,000 Turkish settlers had been implanted, while by 1994 the number of settlers exceeded 80,000 and may have reached 100,000 (on figures extracted from Turkish publications). Indeed, Turkish Cypriot politicians complain bitterly that Turkish Cypriots are becoming a minority in the Turkish occupied area.

TURKEY'S VIOLATIONS OF THE CONVENTION

Cyprus charges against Turkey were published in October 1978 by the Commission after it had declared Cyprus' application admissible i.e. that it would fully investigate and that Turkey had to answer a prima facie case made out by Cyprus. Turkey's Objections
Turkey, as in the earlier applications, raised every conceivable technical objection to the Commission's jurisdiction. In particular it claimed that no application could be considered because:

  1. Turkey did not recognise the Government of the Republic of Cyprus. Commission's ruling: The Government of the Republic was internationally recognised, but in any event to allow Turkey to avoid enforcement of the Convention 'by asserting that they do not recognise the Government... would defeat the purpose of the Convention (Admissibility Report, The Law, para. 13).
  2. Turkey had no control over the occupied area which was under the exclusive jurisdiction of a 'Turkish Federated State of Cyprus. Commission's ruling: Turkey's jurisdiction in Cyprus could not be excluded by asserting that such an entity 'allegedly exercised jurisdiction. It was the presence of Turkish Armed Forces, operating solely under direction of the Turkish Government and acting as 'authorised agents of Turkey, which prevented the Government of the Republic of Cyprus from exercising jurisdiction in the occupied area, and Turkey was responsible for her Army's actions (Ibid, paras. 23-25).
  3. Alleged victims had not made use of Turkey's or the 'Federated State's judicial systems.
    Commission's ruling: The Turkish and 'Turkish Federated State of Cyprus judicial systems were not 'practicable as remedies to Greek Cypriots, who were all refused permission by the Turkish Army to enter the occupied area, and remedies in Turkey were not 'practicable and normally functioning (Ibid, paras. 34-36).
  4. The 2,000 missing persons had been missing for more than six months, so it was too late to complain to the Commission. Commission's ruling: Complaints about the 2,000 missing persons raised a 'continuing violation and any time-limits preventing the making of complaints only became applicable after a state of affairs had ceased to exist (Ibid, paras. 44-5).
  5. In any case the same acts and events had been dealt with by the Commission's earlier Report in 1976.
    Commission's ruling: The new application was not identical with the previous cases (Ibid, para. 49).
  6. Cyprus was abusing the Convention by making accusations of a political nature in order to further a propaganda campaign.13 Commission's ruling: Cyprus' application did not misuse the Convention procedure and was in no sense abusive (Ibid, para. 56).

Further Proceedings
After holding Cyprus' claim against Turkey admissible in October 1978, the Commission had to investigate the facts with the co-operation of both parties, if that was forthcoming, and with the applicant State alone should Turkey refuse to participate despite its Convention obligations to do so. In addition to following all procedural requirements of the Convention, the Commission in March 1983 conducted a hearing at which oral submissions could be made. Turkey chose not to be represented.14 (It should be remembered that Turkey chose not to participate in the investigation of the first two applications).
In November 1983 the Commission adopted its Report.15 According to Article 31.1 of the Convention this Report would have been 'on the facts and stating its opinion as to whether the facts found disclose a breach by the State concerned of its obligations under the Convention. The making of the Report also indicates that no solution by way of friendly settlement was reached. Since Turkey does not recognise the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights, in terms of Convention Article 32 the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe was therefore seized of the case. The Committee of Ministers, by resolution DH (92) 12 adopted on 2 April 1992, deci-ded to make public the report drawn up by the European Commission of Human Rights adopted on 4 October 1983.
The Substance Underlying the Proceedings in Cyprus v. Turkey (Third Application).

MISSING PERSONS

Relevant Articles of the European Convention on Human Rights: 'Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty... (Article 5). 'veryone has the right to respect for his... family life... (Article 8). Charge laid against Turkey: About 2,000 Greek Cypriots, a considerable number being civilians, are still missing. They were last seen alive in the occupied area of Cyprus after hostilities had ceased and under arrest by the Turkish army or armed Turks acting under its direction. Many had been seen in detention in prisons in Turkey or in Cyprus. Turkey nonetheless continued to prevent any investigation by international humanitarian organisations such as the International Committee of the Red Cross. For 9 years, Turkey, through her puppet regime, declined to act on five UN General Assembly Resolutions which sought to activate a humanitarian Committee on Missing Persons to investigate the fate of all Cypriots missing as a result of the invasion. In response there was prevarication, refusal to co-operate and addition of new and obstructive conditions.
Fresh evidence about some of the missing persons last seen alive in Turkish detention revealed that some were in Adana and Amasia prisons in Turkey. Others had been photographed after their surrender or in Turkish ships on their way to Turkey. Yet others had been heard on Turkish radio, broadcasting messages to their families. In the absence of proof that the missing persons had been killed or had died, Turkey was responsible for continuing deprivation of liberty of all those persons shown to have been in her custody. Grave infringement of family rights had also occurred. Families suffered severely, being uncertain whether their loved ones were alive or dead because no account had been given of the fate of those who had disappeared although in Turkish custody. Turkey's Defence: Turkey was not represented at the oral hearing after the Commission's dismissal of her jurisdictional objections, which included the objection that more than six months had passed since it was known that 2,000 Greek Cypriots were missing.16 Commission's Verdict:
'The Commission, having found it established in three cases, and having found sufficient indications in an indefinite number of cases, that Greek Cypriots who are still missing were unlawfully deprived of their liberty, in Turkish custody in 1974, noting that Turkey has failed to account for the fate of these persons, concludes by 16 votes against one that Turkey has violated Art 5 of the Convention'.
Note: After the Commission had reported and at a time when, having regard to the provisions of the Convention, proceedings before the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe would be likely to comence, Turkey's puppet regime in the occupied area agreed to co-operate in establishing the longproposed Committee on Missing Persons. However, such Committee does not have adequate investigatory powers: it can operate only in Cyprus and not in Turkey, where many missing persons were last seen; it cannot order exhumations; and it cannot make any recommendations or award remedies.

DISPLACEMENT OF PERSONS AND SEPARATION OF FAMILIES

Relevant Article of the European Convention on Human Rights: 'Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence (Article 8). Charge laid against Turkey: The Turkish Army sealed off the demarcation line running across the island and known as the green line in Nicosia. They physically prevented about 190,000 displaced Greek Cypriots (now including children born as refugees) from returning to their homes, and continued this policy without remission for a decade, thus aggravating earlier Turkish violations of refugees' rights for which the Commission had as long ago as 1976 condemned Turkey. Turkey's continuing failure to allow families who had fled across the line to be reunited with their remaining relatives in the occupied area was an aggravating factor. Conditions for the 8,000 Greek Cypriots who remained in the occupied area in 1976 (mainly in Karpasia) were so harsh that between 1976 and 1979, about 7,000 were forced to sign applications to leave after suffering violence, threats, curfews, looting, forced labour, refusal of medical facilities and denial of secondary education. Most of the violence and harassment was effected through Anatolian settlers. Those Greek Cypriots who remained in the occupied area were often separated from their children: in order to receive an adequate education, children had to be sent to be educated in the free area and were not permitted by Turkey to return unless they formally acknowledged Turkish jurisdiction over Cyprus.
Turkey's defence: At the admissibility stage, Turkey put forward jurisdictional objections. It should be borne in mind that Turkey's attitude, manifested in the first two applications, was to refuse to participate in Commission proceedings - in default of her procedural obligations under the Convention - once her jurisdictional objections were overruled. Turkey did not appear at the oral hearing in March 1983.
Commission's verdict:
'The Commission concludes, by 13 votes against two with two abstentions that, by her continued refusal to allow over 170 thousand Greek Cypriots to return to their homes in the north of Cyprus, Turkey continues to violate Art 8 in all these cases. The Commission further concludes by 14 votes against two and with one abstention, that, in the cases of continued separation of families resulting from Turkey's refusal to allow the return of Greek Cypriots to their family members in the north, Turkey continues to violate Art 8 of the Convention'.

DEPRIVATION OF POSSESSIONS

Relevant Article of the European Convention on Human Rights: 'Every natural person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of the possession. No one shall be deprived of his possessions... (Protocol No. 1 Article 1). Charge laid against Turkey: The Greek Cypriot refugees who had been driven from their homes or had fled at the time of Turkey's invasion or soon thereafter continued to be deprived of their property by the Turkish Armed Forces' refusal to allow them to return. Under Turkey's direction there was now a consolidation of informal seizures. The Turkish Cypriot puppet authorities purported in 1977 to pass a so-called 'Law to Provide for the Housing and Distribution of Land and Property of Equal Value and amended this in 1982 to give semi-permanent definitive certificates of possession to Turkish settlers (including soldiers of the Occupation Force) and Turkish Cypriots who had been handed Greek Cypriot property.
Wholly new deprivations occurred in respect of the 7,000 Greek Cypriots (mainly from the Karpass) who, under duress, were compelled to leave their homes and possessions and to move to the free area.
More wanton destruction of cultural objects, especially of Greek Orthodox churches and religious treasures, also occurred. Remaining antiquities were discovered to be 'saleable and found their way via Turkish hands to international dealers. Turkish Cypriots, wrote about destruction, pillage, theft, smuggling, and plunder.17
Agricultural, commercial and industrial enterprises belonging to Greek Cypriots in the occupied area, seized by the Turks following the invasion, continued to be exploited by the latter on a permanent basis without any authority from their owners (who were prevented from repossessing them) while a substantial number of Greek Cypriot factories were put into operation for the first time after 1977. One such factory (in the Mia Milia area) is operated by Wearwell Ltd., a subsidiary of Polly Peck PLC, a large U.K. public company, recipient of the Queen's Export Award to Industry. This same group admitted through its Chairman, Mr. Asil Nadir, that it was acting as Turkey's instrument to market the produce of the occupied area.
Indeed a substantial part of the citrus belonging to the Greek Cypriots of the Morphou area is exported to the United Kingdom and Europe by the group. Their exploitation of seized Greek Cypriot assets has been encouraged and facilitated by Turkey, which assisted the group in establishing enterprises on the mainland. The activities in Cyprus of Polly Peck PLC and its associates are similar to those of German industry between 1938 and 1945 in their unprincipled and virtually uncompensated exploitation of seized Jewish assets.18
Turkey's defence: At the admissibility stage Turkey put forward jurisdictional objections. It should be borne in mind that Turkey's attitude, manifested in the first two applications, was to refuse to participate in Commission proceedings - in default of her procedural obligations under the Convention - once her jurisdictional objections were overruled. Turkey did not appear at the oral hearing in March 1983.
Commission's verdict:
'The Commision concludes, by 13 votes against one and with three abstentions, that Turkey has violated Art 1 of Protocol No 1.

DISCRIMINATION

Relevant Article of the European Convention on Human Rights:
'The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any ground such as race... religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a national minority... or other status (Article 14). Charge laid against Turkey: Most of Turkey's violations were directed against members of one community only, namely the Greek Cypriot community, because of their ethnic origin, race and religion. Turkey's aim was to eliminate all traces of Greek civilisation and to set up a demographically homogeneous ethnically Turkish and Muslim state in the occupied area.19 In another context this would be condemned as apartheid or cultural genocide. Turkey's defence: At the admissibility stage Turkey put forward jurisdictional objections. It should be borne in mind that Turkey's attitude, manifested in the first two applications, was to refuse to participate in Commission proceedings - in default of her procedural obligations under the Convention - once her jurisdictional objections were overruled. Turkey did not appear at the oral hearing in March 1983.
Commission's verdict:
'Having again found violations of the rights of Greek Cypriots under a number of Articles of the Convention in the present case, the Commission does not consider it necessary to add anything to its finding under Art. 14 in the previous case.

NO REMEDIES

Relevant Article of the European Convention on Human Rights: 'Everyone whose rights and freedom... are violated shall have an effective remedy... (Article 13).
Charge laid against Turkey: In respect of new and continuing violations from May 1976 onwards no effective remedy was provided by Turkey, whether in her own courts or those of the area she occupied. Indeed, in the occupied area Turkey's puppet regime had purported to enact a 'Constitution, depriving Greek Cypriots of virtually all human rights and conferring 'constitutional protection in respect of many rights only on Turks. Turkey's defence: At the admissibility stage Turkey put forward jurisdictional objections. It should be borne in mind that Turkey's attitude, manifested in the first two applications, was to refuse to participate in Commission proceedings - in default of her procedural obligations under the Convention - once her jurisdictional objections were overruled. Turkey did not appear at the oral hearing in March 1983.
Commission's verdict:
'The Commission, in its examination of the merits of this complaint, does not find it necessary to add anything to its finding in the decision on admissibility.

VIOLATIONS AGAINST TURKISH CYPRIOTS

Relevant Articles of the European Convention on Human Rights:

  1. 'Inhuman or degrading treatmentt (Article 3);
  2. 'The right to liberty and security off persons (Article 5);
  3. 'Fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law (Article 6);
  4. 'The right to respect for his private and family life, his home.... (Article 8);
  5. 'Peaceful enjoyment of his possessions; (Article 1 to Protocol No. 1). Although direct evidence was difficult to obtain because Greek Cypriots and the Government of the Republic were (and are) denied all access to the occupied area, it was apparent from statements by Turkish Cypriots who had escaped to the free area, from the Turkish Cypriot opposition press, from reports by members of the international press and by members of international organisations that Turkish Cypriots were suffering continuous violation of their rights at the hands of Turkey. These violations fall into two categories:
    1. Oppressive acts by Anatolian settlers from Turkey, encouraged and or countenanced by the presence of the Turkish Armed Forces; and
    2. prevention of any return by Turkish Cypriots (who were transferred at Turkey's demand from the Government-controlled area in 1974-1975 to the occupied area) to their homes and properties in the Government-controlled area and denial of any exercise of their rights in respect of such property. In respect of both categories of violations no effective remedy exists. Turkey's defence: At the admissibility stage, Turkey put forward jurisdictional objections, alleging that Cyprus' application was an abuse of the Convention's procedure in that it complained about Turkey's treatment of Turkish Cypriots purely for propaganda purposes and expressed 'false and mock concern for their well-being. The Commission rejected this contention. Regarding the merits stage it should be borne in mind that Turkey's attitude, manifested in the first two applications, was to refuse to participate in Commission proceedings - in default of her procedural obligations under the Convention once her jurisdictional objections were overruled. Tukey did not appear at the oral hearing in March 1983.
    3. Commission's verdict:
      'The Commission, having regard to the material before it, finds that it does not have sufficient available evidence enabling it to come to any conclusion regarding this complaints.

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