zan wrote:Get Real! wrote:kentish wrote:humanist wrote:Is there a coherent GC strategy to reunify Cyprus?
No there isn't because the Turkish Cypriots want to go their own way to create Enosis with Turkey
NO a greek cypriots idea of unity is to control the whole island economically and socially resulting in turkish cypriots becoming a minority with no voice and no means of advancement socially as turkish cpriots.in other words back to the dark days.
i'll stick please
The RoC has had a free market economy backed by a modern democracy for decades, and today it’s also an EU member, so there are NO EXCUSES so you can only blame your shortcomings if unable to compete.
Free to launder money....Plant bombs....Trade in drugs......
...who murders, who steals, and launders money? ...Drug Trade, zan, that would be Turkey.
united republic of cyprus,
up to now we know this, as a common strategy, ...being bicommunal and bizonal, as yet undefined.
there will be one government, or there will be three governing bodies.
There will be a State with its Legislature, Judiciary, and Executive, to defend the Sovereignty of our self determination, for our Freedom as Individuals, and our Individual Rights, our representative toward their betterment within a Family of Man.
There will be Two National Assemblies as well, if the State cannot exist alone. This may be as yet publicly, out of the debate, but this is the "compromise" (and the "punishment") Greek Cypriots will accept so that they can sustain themselves. Greek Cypriots must create for themselves a governing body, a National Assembly, this is the virgin birth if you will, while Turkish Cypriots will continue to sustain their own governance as equals, (Greek=Turk), on territories which are large enough to be clearly deliniated as parts, to make up a zone. Their Jurisdiction, the National Assemblies', will supply its electorate as Persons an identity, as well as a voice. While they may demonstrate distinctive qualities in their inclusiveness toward their own minorities, as a constitiuent of the State, there is the likelihood that their efforts will focus on the diversity of their own society, unlike the monoclonial policies of the present.