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1974 Cypriot coup d'état

Greek military coup d'état in Cyprus


Greek military coup d'état in Cyprus

FieldValue
conflict1974 Cypriot coup d'état
partofthe Cyprus problem
placeCyprus
date15 July 1974
resultCoup successful
combatant1Cyprus Cypriot Government
combatant2Cyprus Flag of Greece (1970-1975).svg Pro-Enosis rebels
commander1Cyprus Makarios III
Cyprus Vassos Lyssarides
Cyprus Pantelakis Pantatzis
commander2Flag of the Cypriot National Guard General Staff.svg Brigadier General Michalis Georgitsis
Flag of the Cypriot National Guard General Staff.svg Colonel Konstantinos Kombokis
EOKA_flag.svg Athanasios Sklavenitis
Cyprus Nikos Sampson
casualties11,617 Cypriots missing, 300 civilians among them killed
casualties2Andreas Kestas – 20 years old, member of the Special Reserve Force, from Limassol.
  • President Makarios III flees and coup leaders take charge.

  • However, later the Turkish invasion of Cyprus forces coup leaders to step down. Turkish occupation of northern Cyprus begins.

  • Cypriot National Guard (factions loyal to Makarios)

  • Efedriko Pro-government militias

  • Movement for Social Democracy

  • Eniaion

  • Progressive Party of Working People

  • Flag of the Cypriot National Guard General Staff.svg Cypriot National Guard (rebel factions)

  • EOKA_flag.svg EOKA-B

  • Progressive Front Supported by: Flag of Greece (1970-1975).svg Greek junta Cyprus Vassos Lyssarides Cyprus Pantelakis Pantatzis Flag of the Cypriot National Guard General Staff.svg Colonel Konstantinos Kombokis EOKA_flag.svg Athanasios Sklavenitis Cyprus Nikos Sampson

Haralambos Kirillou – 19 years old, member of the Special Reserve Force, from Chloraka.

Nikos Solomou – 21 years old, member of the Special Reserve Force, from Pachyammos.

Philipos Kritiotis – 20 years old, National Guard, from Stato-Agios Fotios. A military coup d'état sponsored by the Greek military junta was executed by the Cypriot National Guard on 15 July 1974. The coup plotters removed the sitting President of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III, from office and installed pro-Enosis nationalist Nikos Sampson. The Sampson regime was described as a puppet state, whose ultimate aim was the annexation of the island by Greece; in the short term, the coupists proclaimed the establishment of the "Hellenic Republic of Cyprus". The coup was viewed as illegal by the United Nations and led immediately to the Turkish invasion and ongoing occupation of Cyprus.

Background

The Republic of Cyprus was established in 1960 with the London and Zurich Agreements, and the Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots were the two founding communities. However, following constitutional amendments that were proposed by Makarios III and rejected by Turkish Cypriots, intercommunal violence erupted throughout the island, the Turkish Cypriot representation in the government ended partially due to forced prevention and partially due to willing withdrawal, and Turkish Cypriots started living in enclaves.

Greece had established a national policy of enosis to achieve the island's union with Greece since the 1950s. After 1964, the Greek government tried to control Makarios' policies, and following his unwillingness to obey Athens, attempted to destabilize his government. While the Greek policy shifted to a more cooperative one after 1967, when an extremist military junta took power in Greece, it supported the far-right EOKA-B group against Makarios. Dimitrios Ioannidis, the de facto leader of the junta, believed that Makarios was no longer a true supporter of enosis, and suspected him of being a communist sympathizer. Between 1971 and 1974, five plans were prepared by the Greek government to overthrow Makarios' government.

The coup

The coup was ordered by Dimitrios Ioannidis, the shadow leader of the Greek junta, and Greek officers led the Cypriot National Guard to capture the Presidential Palace in Nicosia. The building was almost entirely burned down. Makarios narrowly escaped death in the attack owing to the efforts of his presidential guard, Haralambos Kirillou a then 19 years old, member of the Special Reserve Force, from Chloraka and Nikos Solomou, a 21 years old, member of the Special Reserve Force, from Pachyammos who took part in an operation to rescue Makarios on 15 July 1974. Owing to this operation, he fled the presidential palace from its back door and went to Paphos, where the British managed to retrieve him in the afternoon of 16 July and flew him from Akrotiri to Malta in a Royal Air Force transport plane, and from there to London the next morning. On 19 July, he attended a United Nations Security Council meeting in New York and gave a speech, in which he stated that Cyprus had been invaded by Greece.

The newly established regime has been described as an extremist puppet regime of the Greek junta. On 15 July, between 8 am and 9 am, the coup leaders proclaimed their victory on the state channel Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation, saying "The national guard intervened in order to solve the problematical situation. [...]. Makarios is dead." However, before his flight, Makarios announced that he was alive from a private broadcast in Paphos. The new government heavily censored the press and stopped left-wing newspapers being printed. Only right-wing newspapers Machi, Ethniki and Agon continued publishing, and their style was very propagandistic. Sampson did not openly announce his intention of enosis in the days following the coup, but instead focused on suppressing any support for Makarios and heavy propaganda to vilify his government.

In response, Rauf Denktaş, the leader of the Turkish Cypriots, stated that he believed that the events were among Greek Cypriots and called for Turkish Cypriots not to go out, as well as for UNFICYP to take extensive security measures for Turkish Cypriots. The Cypriot National Guard made no attempts to enter the Turkish Cypriot enclaves, but raided Greek and Turkish Cypriot homes alike in mixed villages to confiscate weapons. The Turkish government brought claims that ammunition was being carried to Cyprus by Olympic Air to the attention of UNFICYP. Whether the Turkish Cypriots suffered as a direct result of the coup remains controversial, but Sampson was seen as an untrustworthy figure due to his pro-enosis policies and brutal role against Turkish Cypriots in 1963.

Following the coup, the newly established junta started a crackdown on Makarios supporters, resulting in a number of deaths and a "significant number", according to Frank Hoffmeister, being detained. The number of deaths from the coup remains a disputed issue, According to Milliyet on 19 July 1974, violent clashes had broken out in Paphos, and even excluding Paphos, the death toll due to Greek Cypriot infighting was about 300 civilians and 30 Greek soldiers, whose bodies were brought to Athens.

Aftermath

In response to the coup, on 20 July 1974 Turkey invaded the island saying that the action was compliant with the 1960 Treaty of Guarantee, taking control of the north and dividing Cyprus along what became known as the Green Line, cutting off about a third of the total territory. Sampson resigned, the military regime that had appointed him collapsed, and Makarios returned. The Turkish Cypriots established an independent government for what they called the Turkish Federated State of Cyprus (TFSC), with Rauf Denktaş as president. In 1983 they would proclaim the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus on the northern part of the island, which remains a de facto state.

References

References

  1. giannopoulos. (2018-07-15). ""Θα τον φάμε τον π....τη τον Μούσκο". Το πραξικόπημα κατά του Μακάριου που κόστισε 400 νεκρούς. Έλουζαν τους αντιπάλους με οξύ και τους έκαιγαν, εν ψυχρώ εκτελέσεις και βασανιστήρια μεταξύ Ελλήνων, λίγες μέρες πριν από τον Αττίλα".
  2. (2001). "Greece, Turkey and the Aegean Sea: A Case Study in International Law". McFarland.
  3. (July 29, 1974). "CYPRUS: Big Troubles over a Small Island".
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  8. ''Strategic review, Volume 5'' (1977), United States Strategic Institute, [https://books.google.com/books?id=hCfcAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Hellenic+Republic+of+Cyprus%22 p. 48].
  9. Allcock, John B. ''Border and territorial disputes'' (1992), Longman Group, [https://books.google.com/books?id=6pztAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Hellenic+Republic+of+Cyprus%22 p. 55].
  10. [http://countrystudies.us/cyprus/12.htm Eric Solsten, ed. ''Cyprus: A Country Study''], Library of Congress, Washington, DC, 1991.
  11. (2011). "The Cyprus Problem: What Everyone Needs to Know". Oxford University Press.
  12. (2009). "Standing Your Ground: Territorial Disputes and International Conflict". University of Michigan Press.
  13. (2011). "Making War and Building Peace: United Nations Peace Operations". Princeton University Press.
  14. Athanasopulos 2001, [https://books.google.com/books?id=QnlyjuKJa8YC&q=EOKA-B p. 152].
  15. Hoffmeister, Frank. (2006). "Legal aspects of the Cyprus problem: Annan Plan and EU accession". EMartinus Nijhoff Publishers.
  16. "Presidential Palace". Presidency of the Republic of Cyprus.
  17. (2009). "America, Britain and the Cyprus Crisis of 1974: Calculated Conspiracy Or Foreign Policy Failure?". AuthorHouse.
  18. Mallinson, William. (June 30, 2005). "Cyprus: A Modern History". I. B. Tauris.
  19. [http://daccess-ods.un.org/access.nsf/Get?Open&DS=S/PV.1780(OR)&Lang=S UN] The Official Record of United Nations Security Council 1780th Meeting (19.07.1974)
  20. (2013). "Pathways from Ethnic Conflict: Institutional Redesign in Divided Societies". Routledge.
  21. (2012). "Mediating the Nation". Routledge.
  22. (2013). "Influence Without Boots on the Ground: Seaborne Crisis Response". Government Printing Office.
  23. Jüngling, Emili. (June 2005). "Perception of the facts about the coup in Cyprus (15th of July 1974) in the Cyprus daily press".
  24. (16 July 1974). "Türk Birliği Alarma Geçti". Milliyet.
  25. (2001). "Greece, Turkey and the Aegean Sea: A Case Study in International Law". McFarland.
  26. (19 July 1974). "Kıbrıs'ta Türk Evlerinin Aranmasını Protesto Ettik". Milliyet.
  27. Farid Mirbagheri. (2010). "Historical Dictionary of Cyprus". Scarecrow Press.
  28. Richard C. Frucht. (31 December 2004). "Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture". ABC-CLIO.
  29. "Northern Cyprus".
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