Cyprus to mark ‘black anniversaries’ of coup and invasion
The missing persons issue is at the forefront as Cyprus marks on Thursday July’s ‘black anniversaries’ of the coup that overthrew Archbishop Makarios from office and the Turkish invasion.
Authorities are focusing on avoiding past mistakes in the effort to identify the remains of people still missing from the invasion, the newly appointed head of humanitarian affairs for the missing persons Anna Aristotelous said on Wednesday.
Addressing the Greek relatives of the fallen and missing persons, Aristotelous referred to the contribution of the ‘brothers’ during the 1974 invasion but also to the efforts made to determine the fate of missing persons.
She said most of the mainland Greeks were wounded or their traces were lost in the area of Gerolakkos, ten kilometres west of the capital, where the Eldyk camp was located. She referred to it as the Thermopylae of Nicosia saying soldiers fought their last battle there 49 years ago, “knowing that death was inevitable”.
The struggle to preserve the memory and determine the fate of the missing is ongoing despite the difficulties that emerge, she said.
“The difficulties of tracing and identification are well known,” she said referring to the remains of some Greek soldiers who had been buried in cemeteries but listed as among those missing before their remains were returned years later to relatives in Greece.
“We focus on avoiding past mistakes, which no one disputes, and we join forces with a single objective. The discovery of the fate, with convincing and documented evidence, of our last missing person,” she said.
Earlier, the Greek forces in Cyprus attended a commemorative service and laid a wreath as part of the events for the anniversary of invasion.
It was also the focus of a meeting between House president Annita Demetriou and the first vice president of the Greek parliament Ioannis Plakiotakis who visited the island to attend the commemorations on behalf of the Greek House president Constantinos Tasoula.
During their talk, Plakiotakis underlined Greece’s full support and solidarity with Cyprus in its efforts to achieve a just and viable solution to the Cyprus problem.
On Wednesday night, President Nikos Christodoulides and the House president attended and addressed an event of remembrance and honour for the missing persons in Kornos.
On Thursday, the anniversary of the Turkish invasion, the president accompanied by cabinet members and the House president will attend, first at 8am a service at the Makedonitissa Tomb and then at 10am, the annual memorial service for those who died during the Turkish invasion, at the Apostle Varnavas Cathedral in Nicosia.
Later on Thursday, the House president Annita Demetriou will receive the chairperson of the Panhellenic Committee of Parents and Relatives of Undeclared Prisoners and Missing Persons, Maria Kalmpourtzi, at the House of Representatives. She will also attend the memorial service for the fallen Greek and Cypriot officers and soldiers during the 1974 Turkish invasion, organised by the Association of Eoka ’55-’59 Fighters, at Makedonitissa Tomb. At 9.30pm, Demetriou will be at the presidential palace for the event in memory of the 1974 coup d’ état and the Turkish invasion.
On Friday, Agriculture Minister Petros Xenophontos, will address, on behalf of the president, a commemorative event on the occupation of Kyrenia, at Makedonitissa Tomb.
At the memorial services to be held at 8.30 am on Sunday, the government will be represented by government officials in various districts. The laying of wreaths on behalf of the will be done in Limassol by the Health Minister Popi Kanari, at the church of Panagia Pantanassi.
In Larnaca, the Energy Minister Georgos Papanastasiou will attend the service at the church of Ayios Georgios Kontou while in Paphos the Transport Minister Alexis Vafeadis will be at the church of Ayios Theodoros.
The Deputy Minister of Tourism, Kostas Koumis will attend the Ayios Georgios church in Paralimni for the commemoration of the fallen during the coup and the Turkish invasion.