CYPRUS

Erdoğan: Greek Cypriots want to massacre Turks, the EU are dishonest liars

Speaking in occupied northern Cyprus, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan went on another tirade, this time claiming Greek Cypriots want to massacre Turks and describing the European Union and its leaders as "dishonest" and "liars".

"The Greek Cypriot side insists on maintaining its maximalist, insincere and spoiled approach that is disconnected from reality. They have no intention of changing their approach, questioning themselves, and making sincere efforts towards a just solution [on Cyprus]," he said on Tuesday from occupied northern Cyprus.

"Whatever intentions they had in the past, they approach the issue from the same point of view today. When you dig a little deeper, we can see that there are still those who yearn for the pre-1974 massacres. They are not honest.

"Here I am calling out to the European Union. They are all lies. There is no democracy in the European Union. The European Union was going to give its support to Northern Cyprus at the financial and administrative point. Did it? No it didn't. Why? Because their lives are based on lies. They are not honest.

"They [European Union leaders] called me the other day and they said, 'We heard that you are going to make a speech in Northern Cyprus on the 20th of this month, we hope there won't be any disturbing talks there.'

"Well we won't need your permission to make a speech.

"Now, as many Turkish enemies as there are today, they will also make a speech with [Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos] Mitsotakis in America, perhaps by video conference, that will respond to us."

Erdoğan also announced the partial reopening of Famagusta during his announcements from the pseudo-state of occupied Northern Cyprus.

3.5% of Famagusta, which is a militarised area following the Turkish invasion of Northern Cyprus in 1974, is opening.

Erdoğan's announcement concerns a very small area of ​​the occupied city, specifically Varosha, corresponding to a few houses.

The Security Council adopted a resolution in 1984 which said any attempts to settle any part of Varosha by people other than its original inhabitants is “inadmissible.”

It called “for the transfer of that area to the administration of the United Nations.”

A 1992 resolution reaffirmed the 1984 resolution and called for Varosha to be put under control of the U.N. peacekeeping force in Cyprus – but that has not happened.

READ MORE: Erdoğan announces partial “reopening” of occupied Famagusta.

Ads1

Ads1
Athens Bureau

Recent Posts

Archbishop of Australia Arrives in Cuba to Mark 20th Anniversary of Saint Nicholas Church Consecration

Archbishop Makarios of Australia arrived in Havana on January 22, 2025, to represent Ecumenical Patriarch…

3 hours ago

Maria Menounos: Visited Her Mother's Grave with Her Daughter – "It Hurts When You Need Her and She's Not There"

Maria Menounos shared an emotional moment on Instagram, visiting her late mother's grave with her…

3 hours ago

Commemorating Jews of Greece: International Holocaust Remembrance Day

Seventy-six years after the liberation of Auschwitz, Greece remembers the victims of the Nazi-perpetrated Holocaust,…

3 hours ago

Turkey-Greece Visa Program Sparks Tourism Boom, Strengthens Bilateral Ties

Since Greece introduced its visa-on-arrival program for Turkish citizens in April 2024, over 100,000 Turkish…

3 hours ago

Amidst Personal Challenges, Aryna Sabalenka and Georgios Frangulis Strengthen Their Bond

Aryna Sabalenka, the world No. 1, sought to make history with a third consecutive Australian…

6 hours ago

Israeli Airlines Reroute Flights from Paphos to Larnaca Due to Security Concerns

In response to undisclosed security concerns, the Israel General Security Service, Shin Bet, has instructed…

6 hours ago