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The "Ghost City" held hostage - Picture Thread

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The "Ghost City" held hostage - Picture Thread

Postby Paphitis » Sat Mar 14, 2009 4:20 pm

The "Ghost City" held at Ransom by the "trnc" and Turkey...

Please post ANY Ghost City pictures that you have. We must never forget Turkey's Barbarism and always be vigilant against her sinister attempts at using Ammochostos as a bargaining chip to strip Cypriots of their rights.

I apologise to anyone that might be upset from the images...

Image

Image

Image

Image
Last edited by Paphitis on Sat Mar 14, 2009 4:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby insan » Sat Mar 14, 2009 4:27 pm

The time in North Cyprus is 16.27.29 on Saturday, 14th March, 2009.
Varosha (Maras)
Famagusta, North Cyprus



A Crumbling Hotel

After the siege of Famagusta in 1571 the Venetians were expelled from the city by the Ottomans. They decreed that no non-Moslems would be allowed to live within the walled town. Consequently, Famagusta expanded to the south. This new town was known as Varosha (Maras in Turkish).



In the 1970's, with the decline of Beirut as a holiday destination, Varosha stepped in. Many new high rise building were constructed to cater for the increasing number of tourists, and by 1974, Famagusta, and in particular the suburb of Varosha had become the number one (almost the only) tourist destination on the island.




An Overgrown Street

In 1974, during the Turkish intervention, Turkish Cypriots from the surrounding areas had sought refuge inside the walled city. Greek Cypriots, on the other hand, mainly congregated in the Varosha area of the town. As the Turkish forces approached, most of the population of Varosha, around 40,000, fled to the south. Thinking they would be back within days, most of them left all their possessions behind.




Abandoned Properties

After the cease fire, Varosha was made part of the UN buffer zone, although it is still controlled by the Turkish military, and with the exception of the Agios Ioannis Church & Icon Museum, access is restricted to UN and Turkish military personnel. There are, however, various areas where the view into the restricted area is quite good.



Since 1974, the town has remained untouched. Weeds have taken over the streets, the buildings are gradually crumbling, and the beach is deserted.



Reopening of Varosha is one of the bargaining chips used by both sides, but has proved to be a constant stumbling block. The south wants to reclaim it, but is not prepared to accept the north's contention that although the Greek Cypriots lived there, the land was leased to them by an Islamic charitable foundation.



Varosha would have been returned to the Republic of Cyprus as part of the Annan Plan, but the plan was rejected by the Greek Cypriot voters.
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Postby insan » Sat Mar 14, 2009 4:32 pm

After intensive efforts by Waldheim, Makarios and Denktas met on January 27, 1977, the first meeting between the two men since the Turkish Cypriots had withdrawn from the government of the republic in 1964. By then Makarios was leaning toward negotiation on the basis of a bizonal federation, provided that there be some Turkish Cypriot territorial concessions. He continued to insist on a strong central government and freedom of movement for all Cypriots. He demanded 80 percent of the territory, proportionate to the size of the Greek Cypriot population, but indicated that he might accept 75 percent if it included Varosha, the formerly prosperous tourist area of Famagusta to which 35,000 Greek Cypriots wanted to return. Denktas apparently indicated readiness to consider about 68 percent.

On February 12, 1977, the two men met and agreed on four guidelines. The first was that Cyprus would be an independent, nonaligned, bicommunal federal republic. Second, the territory under the administration of each community was to be discussed in light of economic viability, productivity, and property rights. Third, questions of principle such as freedom of movement and settlement, rights of ownership, and certain special matters were to be open for discussion, taking into consideration the fundamental decision for a bicommunal federal system and certain practical difficulties. Finally, the powers and functions of a central government would be such as to safeguard the unity of the country.

This achievement raised hopes among Cyprus's foreign friends that a settlement could be reached. These hopes were dashed when President Makarios, the central figure in the Greek Cypriot community, died of a heart attack in August 1977. Spyros Kyprianou, his successor, pledged to adhere to positions he believed Makarios would have taken.

Over time, it became clear that Kyprianou enjoyed less political room to maneuver than his predecessor, partly because of the growing political strength of the refugees and displaced persons. Kyprianou found in this group a ready-made constituency, and he embraced their advocacy of their right to return to homes and property and their call for a permeable border and unimpeded free movement and unrestricted settlement. This position sharpened differences with the Turkish Cypriot advocacy of a tightly controlled border and guarantees that the ethnic balance established by the de facto partition would remain undisturbed.

In April 1978, a new set of Turkish Cypriot proposals was made public, but was quickly rejected by the Greek Cypriot negotiator, Papadopoulos, who objected to both the proposals constitutional and territorial aspects. Kyprianou dismissed Papadopoulos in June over disagreements.

Later in 1978, external powers tried their hand at a Cyprus proposal. President Jimmy Carter had convinced a slim majority in the United States Congress to lift the arms embargo imposed against Turkey because of its intervention on Cyprus; Carter pledged to renew diplomatic efforts to resolve the Cyprus problem. The United States then worked with Britain and Canada to launch a new settlement plan. The twelve-point plan (often called the ABC plan because of its American, British, and Canadian sponsorship) proposed a biregional, independent federal republic. The state's constitutional structure would conform to the Makarios-Denkta guidelines of February 1977, as well as to pertinent clauses of the 1960 constitution. There would be two constituent regions. The federal government would be responsible for foreign affairs, defense, currency and central banking, trade, communications, federal finance, customs, immigration and emigration, and civil aviation. Residual functions would rest with the two regions. A bicameral legislature would be established, with the upper chamber evenly divided between the two communities, and the lower one divided on a population-ratio basis. The Council of Ministers would be jointly selected by the president and vice president, one of whom would be a Greek Cypriot and the other a Turkish Cypriot. On territorial issues, the plan envisioned significant Turkish Cypriot geographic concessions, although the size and locale of the two regions would take into account factors such as economic viability, security, population distribution, and history. The plan addressed the refugee issue, and called for essentially a demilitarized republic and withdrawal of all foreign forces except for an agreedupon contingent.

The Republic of Cyprus government objected to many points in the plan, largely because it preempted various positions of the two sides. The Greek Cypriot foreign minister said he would have preferred an agenda that did not go into so much detail. Other Greek Cypriot forces, including the church and some political parties, also opposed the plan. In the Greek community, only Glafkos Clerides urged its acceptance as a basis for talks. Turkish Cypriots also formally rejected the plan as an overall settlement package.

However, the ABC plan stimulated further efforts toward a settlement, and the UN Security Council acted quickly to resume intercommunal talks, on the basis of an agenda that combined the Makarios-Denktas guidelines with some aspects of the allied plan.

Two other effects of the American initiative should be noted. The plan was the last American-drafted proposal for Cyprus and convinced some in the Western policy community that even a fairminded effort had little chance of winning Cypriot acceptance. Second, it reinforced Cypriot anxiety about having solutions imposed from outside. By the early 1990s, many features of the initiative remained part of the UN-brokered negotiating effort, but Cypriots remained committed to writing their own plan.

Data as of January 1991





NOTE: The information regarding Cyprus on this page is re-published from The Library of Congress Country Studies and the CIA World Factbook. No claims are made regarding the accuracy of Cyprus 1977 Makarios-Denktas Accords information contained here. All suggestions for corrections of any errors about Cyprus 1977 Makarios-Denktas Accords should be addressed to the Library of Congress and the CIA.
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Re: The "Ghost City" held hostage - Picture Thread

Postby bill cobbett » Sat Mar 14, 2009 4:39 pm

Paphitis wrote:The "Ghost City" held at Ransom by the "trnc" and Turkey...

Please post ANY Ghost City pictures that you have. We must never forget Turkey's Barbarism and always be vigilant against her sinister attempts at using Ammochostos as a bargaining chip to strip Cypriots of their rights.

I apologise to anyone that might be upset from the images...

Image

Image

Image

Image


...and some would "negotiate" with the land-grabbing thieves.
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Postby growuptcs » Sat Mar 14, 2009 4:44 pm

Only the true land owners know that its all a Turkish PR stunt.
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Re: The "Ghost City" held hostage - Picture Thread

Postby bill cobbett » Sat Mar 14, 2009 5:00 pm

Paphitis wrote:The "Ghost City" held at Ransom by the "trnc" and Turkey...

Please post ANY Ghost City pictures that you have. We must never forget Turkey's Barbarism and always be vigilant against her sinister attempts at using Ammochostos as a bargaining chip to strip Cypriots of their rights.

I apologise to anyone that might be upset from the images...

Image

Image

Image

Image



This is a link to Famagusta Municipality - Loads of info and pictures, some from within the wire.

http://www.famagusta.org.cy/default-en.asp
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Postby Paphitis » Sun Mar 15, 2009 4:33 am

Barbed Wire Skyline:
Image

Famagust Patrol Site:
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Forbidden Zone:
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Ghost City and Sand:
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Ghost City Neighborhood:
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Ghost City Road:
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Ghost City Towers:
Image

Someone's House behind the line:
Image

http://www.michaeltotten.com/archives/000985.html
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Postby paliometoxo » Sun Mar 15, 2009 4:35 am

ghost town home of the jerkish army..... thats why they wont give it up then where will the 40 k soldiers go to live free ?
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Postby boomerang » Sun Mar 15, 2009 5:15 am

Abandoned Properties

Reopening of Varosha is one of the bargaining chips used by both sides, but has proved to be a constant stumbling block. The south wants to reclaim it, but is not prepared to accept the north's contention that although the Greek Cypriots lived there, the land was leased to them by an Islamic charitable foundation.


titty man, how did they islamic foundation get thier grotty fingers on this soil...you mind explaining this?

and don't come up with capitalism and globalrism theories... :lol:
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Postby Paphitis » Sun Mar 15, 2009 5:36 am

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Above images are obtained from Google Earth!
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