Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
Encyclopedia : T : TU : TUR : Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
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| Political status | de facto: Independent de jure: Recognized only by Turkey | ||||
| Official language | Turkish | ||||
| Capital | Lefkoşa (Nicosia) | ||||
| Founder | Rauf Denktaş | ||||
| President | Mehmet Ali Talat | ||||
| Prime Minister | Ferdi Sabit Soyer | ||||
| House Speaker | Fatma Ekenoğlu | ||||
| Area - Total - % water | 3,355 km² 2.7% | ||||
| Population - Total (2006) - Density | 264,172 (de facto 2006 census result) | ||||
| GDP - Total - GDP per capita - GDP - real growth rate | (2004) ,766 billion ,095(nominal) %15,4 | ||||
| Independence - Declared | 15 November 1983 | ||||
| Currency | New Turkish Lira 1 | ||||
| Time zone - in summer | EET (UTC+2) EEST (UTC+3) | ||||
| National anthem | İstiklâl Marşı 1 | ||||
| Internet TLD | .nc.tr 2 | ||||
| Calling Code | +90 392 3 | ||||
| 1 Shared with Turkey. 2 A second-level domain of Turkey. 3 Local dialing code of Turkey. | |||||
The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) (Turkish: Kuzey Kıbrıs Türk Cumhuriyeti) or Turkish Cypriot State (Turkish: Kıbrıs Türk Devleti) is a break-away de facto state in the northern third of the island of Cyprus. It was unilaterally proclaimed in 1983, nine years after the Greek Cypriot coup d'etat that was carried out by EOKA-B which was instigated by the Greek military junta of 1967-1974 and the ensuing Turkish invasion of Cyprus. Its predecessor from 1975 to 1983 was the Turkish Federative State of North Cyprus.
Turkey is currently the only state that recognizes the TRNC. The Organization of the Islamic Conference has recently taken steps towards recognition of TRNC, while all national governments and the United Nations recognize only the de jure sovereignty of the Republic of Cyprus over the whole island. The UN considers the TRNC to be illegal in several of its resolutions. The TRNC functions as a self-governing protectorate of Turkey. The European Court of Human Rights, in the landmark judgment of Loizidou v. Turkey, has in fact called TRNC a "subordinate local administration of Turkey." Although TRNC institutions are not recognized internationally, the President of the TRNC is recognized as the negotiating representative of the Turkish Cypriot community. TRNC has applied to the Commonwealth Games Federation to take part in the Commonwealth Games as a team separate from Cyprus, but so far this proposal has been rejected.
The TRNC has a population of about 200,000 and an area of 3,355 square kilometres (including the tiny enclave of Kokkina (Turkish: Erenköy). Its population is almost entirely Turkish-speaking ethnic Turks, and consists of two main communities: indigenous Turkish Cypriots and migrant Anatolian Turks. Many of the older Turkish Cypriots speak and understand Greek - some may even be considered native speakers of the Greek Cypriot dialect. There are also tiny populations of enclaved Greek Cypriots and Maronites. The TRNC includes the northern part of the city of Nicosia (Turkish: Lefkoşa, Greek: Lefkosia), which serves as its capital. A large share of the people living in northern Cyprus after the Turkish invasion have emigrated, particularly to Western Europe but also to Turkey and have subsequently been replaced by settlers from Turkey. Many left the island due to the grim economic situation of the TRNC which, because of its unrecognized status, faces many difficulties in trading with third countries.
From the tip of the Karpass Peninsula (Cape Apostolos Andreas) in the northeast, the TRNC extends westward to Morphou Bay and Cape Kormakitis (the Kokkina/Erenköy exclave marks the westernmost extent of the TRNC), and southward to the village of Akıncılar. The territory between the TRNC and the remainder of Cyprus is separated by a United Nations-controlled buffer zone.
- 1 History
- 1.1 1960 - Establishment of the Republic of Cyprus
- 1.2 1963 - Inter-communal fighting and constitutional collapse
- 1.3 Enclaves
- 1.4 1974 - Greek and Turkish military actions
- 1.5 1975 - From federation to independence
- 2 Politics
- 3 Five Finger Mountain Legends
- 4 Economy
- 5 International status
- 6 Communications and transport
- 7 Tourist attractions
- 8 Folk Dance
- 9 See also
- 10 External links
History
1960 - Establishment of the Republic of Cyprus
The Republic of Cyprus was established after the island gained independence from the United Kingdom. The ethnically Greek and Turkish communities living on the island were given full participation in governing the new Republic. Both groups were allocated seats in the government chambers and positions in the civil service. The Constitution of the Republic provided that 70% of the members of the House of Representatives would be Greek-Cypriots and 30% Turkish-Cypriots. For some matters, like the budget, for example, separate majorities were required. In the army and the civil service, the ratio had to be 60-40 respectively. Greece, Turkey, and the UK became guarantor powers of the Republic under the 1960 Treaty of Guarantee.1963 - Inter-communal fighting and constitutional collapse
The fighting left 191 Turkish and 133 Greek Cypriots dead and 209 Turks and 41 Greeks missing [link]. Widespread looting of Turkish Cypriot villages led to twenty thousand refugees retreating into armed enclaves which remained for 11 years, relying on food and medical supplies from Turkey to survive. Though much of the initial withdrawal was in the wake of violence, it has been alleged that the Turkish Cypriots' own paramilitary group TMT exercised influence in preventing some Turkish Cypriots returning to their villages, thus leading to the segregation of the communities. [[Citing sources citation needed]]
Enclaves
According to Brigadier Francis Henn1, former Chief of Staff, UN Force in Cyprus, the Turkish Cypriots were "besieged" and "56,000 members of the community had been deprived [by the Greek Cypriots authorities] of their normal means of subsistence".1974 - Greek and Turkish military actions
In July 1974, the Greek military junta of 1967-1974 backed a Greek Cypriot military coup d'état in Cyprus. President Makarios was removed from office and Nikos Sampson, a former EOKA fighter and a member of Parliament, took over the presidency. Using the coup as a pretext, Turkey invaded Cyprus, claiming that it was a necessary intervention to protect the Turkish Cypriot populace according to the 1960 Treaty of Guarantee. The coup promptly failed and Makarios returned to power. Turkish forces proceeded to take over about 37% of the island, ethnically cleansing the occupied areas of their Greek Cypriot population. In total, over 195,000 Greek Cypriots fled to the south of the island while 75,000 Turkish Cypriots moved north.[[Citing sources citation needed]]1975 - From federation to independence
In 1975, the "Turkish Federated State of North Cyprus" was declared as a first step to international recognition of a Turkish Cypriot separatist state in Cyprus. The move was rejected by the Republic of Cyprus, by the UN, and by the international community. After eight years of failed negotiations with the leadership of the Greek Cypriot Community, the north declared its independence in 1983 under the name of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. The UDI of the TRNC was rejected by the UN and the Republic of Cyprus. For detailed accounts of the background to the Cyprus dispute, see:Reference 1 Brigadier Francis Henn,A Business of Some Heat - the UN force in Cyprus before and during the 1974 Turkish invasion, Pen & Sword Books 2004.
Politics
- More information on politics and government of Northern Cyprus can be found at the Politics and government of Northern Cyprus series.
Five Finger Mountain Legends
- There are many legends about the Five Finger Mountain. One tells the story of a conceited villager who fell in love with the local queen and asked for her hand in marriage. The queen wished to be rid of the impertinent young man and requested that he bring her some water from the spring of St Andreas monastery in the karpas. This was a perilous journey in those days. The man set off and after several weeks returned with a skin full of that precious water. The queen was most dismayed to see that he had succeeded, but still refused to marry him. In a fit of rage, he poured the water on to the earth, seized a handful of the resulting mud and threw it at the queens head. She ducked and the lump of mud sailed far across the plain to land on top of the Kyrenia mountain range, where it is to this day, still showing the impression of the thwarted villager’s five fingers.
- Another famous one is after the Byzantine hero Digenis Akritas. Tradition has it that Digenis Akritas hand gripped the mountain to get out of the sea when he came to free Cyprus from its Saracen invaders, and this is his handprint. (He also threw a large rock across Cyprus to get at the Saracen ships. That rock landed in Paphos at the site of the birthplace of Aphrodite, thus known to this day as Petra tou Romiou or Rock of the Greek.)
Economy
The economy of the Turkish Cypriot North is dominated by the services sector including the public sector, trade, tourism and education, with smaller agriculture and light manufacturing sectors. The economy operates on a free-market basis, although it continues to be handicapped by the political isolation of Turkish Cypriots, the lack of private and governmental investment, high freight costs, and shortages of skilled labor. Despite these constraints, the Turkish Cypriot economy turned in an impressive performance in 2003 and 2004, with growth rates of 9.6% and 11.4%. This growth has been buoyed by the relative stability of the Turkish Lira and by a boom in the education and construction sectors. The Turkish Cypriots are heavily dependent on monetary transfers from the Turkish government. Under the 2003-06 economic protocol, Ankara plans to provide around $550 million to the TRNC. The number of tourists visiting North Cyprus during January-August 2003 was 286,901.[link]
Over the same period, per capita income almost doubled
- US$4,409 (2002)
- US$5,949 (2003)
- US$8,095 (2004)
- [[Citing sources citation needed]] (2005)
International status
The international community - with the exception of Turkey - does not recognize the TRNC as a sovereign nation (Note: the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic, an exclave of Azerbaijan, does regard the TRNC as sovereign, while the state of Azerbaijan officially has not followed suit). The Organization of the Islamic Conference gives the TRNC the status of a constituent state, and it is an observer member of this organization.
Since the April 2004 referendum on the United Nations Annan Plan, the attitude of the international community towards the TRNC has begun to improve. Günter Verheugen, the EU's Enlargement Commissioner, was reported as saying that the EU was considering opening a representative office in the TRNC. EU foreign ministers agreed to give the TRNC 259 million euros (US$307 million) in aid, but the blocking of the aid by the Greek Cypriot Administration resulted in the decision being postponed, and half of the money to be lost.
Legally, however, the European Union continues to consider northern Cyprus as EU territory with a disputed foreign military presence and thus indefinitely exempt from EU legislation until a settlement has been reached. While certain outlying regions of the EU can and do obtain exemptions from EU law, Northern Cyprus is the only part of the Union where such laws are not enforceable. The number of seats assigned to Cyprus in the European Parliament (six seats) is based on the population of the entire island. Despite the fact that the Turkish Cypriot residents of Northern Cyprus - and possibly some of the naturalized Anatolian Turks - are EU citizens, fewer than expected Northerners voted in the 2004 elections. There is no support for admitting two Cypriot member states into the EU, as long as the Cyprus problem is not solved.
Communications and transport
Because of its status, the TRNC is heavily dependent on Turkish military and economic support. It uses the New Turkish Lira as its currency. All TRNC exports and imports have to take place via Turkey. International telephone calls are routed via a Turkish dialling code: +90 392. On the Web. TRNC is under the Turkish second-level domain .nc.tr, and mail must be addressed via Mersin 10, TURKEY as the Universal Postal Union refuses to recognize the TRNC as a separate entity.
Direct flights to Northern Cyprus are forbidden by the Republic of Cyprus. The airports of Geçitkale and Ercan are only recognized as legal ports of entry by Turkey and Azerbaijan. (Note: Following a 2005 visit by three members of the US Congress to Ercan, there were indications that the airport satisfied US security standards for international flights. Ercan, in particular, was subject to extensive security checks some months prior to the June 2005 landing. In June 2005, President George W. Bush instructed Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to make an investigation into the practicality of direct commercial airline flights from the United States to Ercan).
TRNC sea ports had been declared closed to all shipping by the Republic of Cyprus since the Turkish invasion in 1974. Turkey, however, rejects this declaration while TRNC-registered vessels have free access to Turkish sea ports (Note: In retaliation for the closure order, Turkey denied entry to Turkish territorial waters to Cypriot-flagged ships, despite the signing of the EU Customs Union Protocol. The EU has demanded the lifting of the Turkish ban on Cypriot shipping and aviation and the recognition of the Republic of Cyprus as preconditions of Turkey's EU accession).
Naturalized TRNC citizens or foreigners carrying a passport stamped by the TRNC authorities may be refused entry by the Republic of Cyprus or Greece[[Citing sources citation needed]], although after the accession of the Republic of Cyprus to the EU such restrictions have been eased following confidence-building measures between Athens and Ankara and the partial opening of the UN controlled line by the North Cypriot authorities. The Republic of Cyprus also allows passage across the Green Line from the part of Nicosia that it controls (as well as a few other selected crossing points), since the TRNC does not leave entry stamps in the passport for such visits.
Airports and harbours
- Ercan/Tymvou Airport (Lefkoşa/Nicosia - Main Airport)
- Geçitkale/Lefkoniko Airport (Gazimağusa/Famagusta)
- Ilker Karter Airport (Girne/Kyrenia)
- Pınarbaşı Airport (Girne/Kyrenia)
- Topel Airport (Güzelyurt/Morphou)
- Port of Girne/Kyrenia
- Port of Gazimağusa/Famagusta
Universities
- Eastern Mediterranean University[link]
- Near East University[link]
- European University of Lefke[link]
- International Cyprus University[link]
- Girne American University[link]
- Middle East Technical University Northern Cyprus Campus / Guzelyurt[link]
NGOs
- Management Centre for the Eastern Mediterranean [link]
- Turkish Cypriot Red Crescent Association [link]
In April 2006, a General Assembly of the organisation elected the recently retired president of the supreme court, Taner Erginel, as President.
Tourist attractions
- Nicosia has an old town centre similar to that of Famagusta The ancient city centre is surrounded by a 5.5 km long city wall, which is still intact.
- To the northeast the mythical Five Finger mountains (Pentadactylos, Turkish: Beşparmak) guard the city. This rocky five finger mountain rises 700 meters above sea level and harbours the legend of the Byzantine hero Digenis, who defeated the invading Arabs with supernatural strength.
- A giant TRNC flag is painted on the southern side of the mountain, near the village of Vouno/Taşkent, which can be easily seen from most of Nicosia.
- One of the most beautiful beaches in the Mediterranean is in the Karpaz in the furthest Easten tip of the island and is a nesting ground for endangered loggerhead and green turtles.
Folk Dance
Traditional Turkish Cypriot folk dances can be divided into 5 categories: Karsilamas, Sirtos, Zeybeks, Ciftetellis & Arabiyes, and Topical Dances. Karsilama means coming face to face in Turkish. It is danced by two or more dancers by coming face to face, among whom there exists a very good friendship. This causes a smiling mimic on the dancers' faces because of their happiness of enjoying together. There are separate women karsilamas and men karsilamas. In some karsilamas dancers use a handkerchief and dance by (each of them) holding one side of it. Some dancers might from time to time show their special talents like spinning, jumping, kneeling, or hitting their feet or legs or the ground with their hands in accordance with the rhythm of the music simultaneously with spinning or jumping or kneeling... Karsilamas are named with numbers. Karsilama 1, Karsilama 2, Karsilama 3, Karsilama 4, Women's Karsilama 3, Women's Karsilama 4, etc... And they are usually played and danced in the same ascending order as listed here.- Sirto
- Ciftetelli and Arabiye
- Topical Dances
- Some examples Topical Dances:
- Orak: Orak means sickle in Turkish. This dance is about harvesting time. Farmer men use their sickles to harvest. Their women also help them. The women give water (in jugs) to thirsty and tired men. Some of the men, when they become vigorous or when they want to show off, start to show their expertise in using their sickles. They throw up and catch their sickles repeatedly, use two sickles simultaneously for harvesting, etc...
- Kozan: This is danced with a water jug in "henna nights" (a part of wedding ceremonies), after the bride's hand has been put henna. At the end of this dance which is danced by only females, the bride brakes the jug by throwing it to the ground. The broken jug symbolizes an everlasting happiness. Another belief is that the pieces of this broken jug (and the coins and sweets put a-priori inside the jug) which spread on the ground when the jug is broken symbolize fertility.
- Kartal: Kartal means eagle in Turkish. This dance is about the struggle of an eagle not to let his prey be seized by other eagles.
- Topal: Topal means lamed in Turkish. This dance is about the struggle of a lamed bridegroom candidate with his "would be" father-in-law who does not like him as a husband for his daughter even though he is also lamed.
See also
- List of cities in Cyprus for Greek, Turkish and Classical names.
- Elections in Cyprus
- Cyprus Turkish Football Federation
- Bayrak Radio and Television Corporation
- Türk Ajansi Kibris (TAK) News Agency
- Constitution of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
- Non-recognized nations
- Reunification
External links
Official links
- [Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus government site]
- [Office Of The President, Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus]
- [Northern Cypriot Tourism Office]
- [TRNC Public Information Office]
- [TRNC Central Bank in Turkish language]
Other links
- [ATCA News, Association of Turkish Cypriots Abroad]
- ["Islamic Conference's Parliaments to Call TRNC 'Cyprus Turkish State'" JTW]
- [Useful Information on TRNC]
- [About TRNC]
- [Comprehensive information on Northern Cyprus]
- [International Expert Panel for a European Solution in Cyprus]
- [Assembly of Turkish American Associations]
- [Chronology - Cyprus Issue]
- [Münüse, Folk Music]
- [TIKA]
- from Wikitravel
- [EU task-force on Turkish Cypriot community]
- [link]
- [North Cyprus Forum]
: Hong Kong (PRC) | Jammu/Kashmir (India/Pakistan/PRC) | Macau (PRC) | Nagorno-Karabakh (Azerbaijan) | Nakhichevan (Azerbaijan) | Palestinian territories (Israel/Palestinian Authority) | Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (Cyprus)
Other territories and entities: Akrotiri and Dhekelia2 | Åland | Faroe Islands | Gibraltar | Greenland3 | Guernsey | Jan Mayen | Jersey | Isle of Man | Svalbard
Unrecognised countries: Abkhazia | Nagorno-Karabakh2 | South Ossetia | Transnistria | Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus2
Geographical notes: (1) Partly in Asia; (2) Entirely in Asia but having sociopolitical connections with Europe; (3) Entirely in North America but having sociopolitical connections with Europe
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