In 2009, Greek Cypriot pressure for the British High Commissioner not to attend a wreath-laying service at the British War Memorial in Girne failed |
By John Oakes
Representatives of the Queen have been ordered to stay away from the unveiling of a memorial to 19 British policemen gunned down in Cyprus during
the troubles. The ban has angered serving officers, relatives and veterans.
The British
High Commissioner for Cyprus , Mr. Ric Todd bluntly
informed TRNC Royal British Legion officials that he will
not be attending their November 8th ceremony.
That remains the position, despite protests to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office made
this week by peers and MPs.
Even Sir Hugh Orde, former Chief Constable of Northern Ireland and now Patron
of the Police Roll of Honour Trust, the charity sponsoring the
memorial, has been told he may only attend on condition that he leaves his uniform and
medals at home. No other uniforms are being allowed at the unveiling.
The snub follows pressure from the
Greek Cypriot authorities who claim that the slightest sign of Royal involvement in
the ceremony would be
tantamount to acknowledging the existence of the Turkish Republic
of Northern Cyprus , which
they claim is “illegal”, and therefore cannot be allowed any
form of diplomatic recognition.
To date, only Turkey recognises the TRNC. It
was Turkey 's armed intervention
in 1974 which created a safe haven for Turkish Cypriots in
northern Cyprus after
they had been subjected to ten years of genocide. The TRNC was
eventually declared under President Rauf Denktaş in 1983 after
nearly a decade of talks with Greek Cypriots had failed to unite the island.
The Greek Cypriots continue to claim they are the sole authority on the island,
even though this goes directly against the constitution and the international
treaties governing the Republic
of Cyprus .
British acceptance of the Royal ban
has caused outrage in police and military circles, who see
it as cowardly and disrespectful to the men who laid
down their lives for their country – and not just British lives. The Memorial also lists 25 Turkish Cypriots,
18 Greek Cypriots and 1 Maronite who were also shot by Greek Cypriot
EOKA terrorists fighting for Enosis
(union with Greece )
between 1955 and 1960.
When asked to comment on the issue, the Minister
for Europe, The Rt Hon David Lidington MP said
this week: "Anniversaries are a politically sensitive
issue in Cyprus ,
and we consider British Government participation carefully."
British Legion and Police Roll
of Honour officials involved are being diplomatically
tight-lipped about the whole affair, but other old Cyprus hands are seething.
Lord Maginnis, photo from BBC |
Lord Maginnis, a veteran of Ulster 's stormy politics and previously an
Army Major who served in Northern
Ireland for 12 years, told T-VINE this week:
"When,
in 2009, I insisted that the British High Commissioner
in Cyprus
[Peter Millet] attend the unveiling of the British/Cyprus memorial to our
371 servicemen who died between 1956 and 1959, the Greek Cypriots boycotted his
office until he was replaced. But that is no excuse for either this or the
previous Government's blatant cowardice and capitulation to the successors
of EOKA and EOKA-B. It makes me angry and so ashamed."
He continued, "The recently-released diaries of General Grivas, the genocidal head of EOKA, put next week's Royal ban in perspective: it comes as a direct result of the inter-community bloodshed he created. His evil deeds cast a long shadow."
He continued, "The recently-released diaries of General Grivas, the genocidal head of EOKA, put next week's Royal ban in perspective: it comes as a direct result of the inter-community bloodshed he created. His evil deeds cast a long shadow."
Inconceivable that the British government acquiesed to the demands of the very people that were responsible for the deaths of British servicemen. The dead must be turning in their graves in disgust.
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