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What If: The Annan Plan and Turkey

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What If: The Annan Plan and Turkey

Postby boomerang » Sun Jun 14, 2009 5:05 am

What If: The Annan Plan and Turkey

What If: The Annan Plan and Turkey

By Marcus A. Templar

Greek Cypriots, the majority population on the Island of Cyprus, overwhelmingly rejected a plan for reunification with the island�s small Turkish minority developed by United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan in a referendum on April 24, 2004. The majority Greeks regarded the solution offered by Annan as impractical and unfair, while the government of Turkey praised it as very doable and accommodating to both parties. The size of the Turkish minority in Cyprus –some 18 percent of the island�s population, settlers brought illegally from Turkey excluded -- equals the percentage of the Kurdish minority in Turkey itself. Given long-standing Kurdish demands for greater political and other rights in Turkey, an interesting “what if” question arises--if the Annan Plan were implemented within Turkey for its Kurdish minority, would the Turks still find the plan fair and practical?
Here�s the “what if?”
Upon agreement of the two main communities living in Turkey (Kurdish and Turkish), the present state ceases to exist pending approval of the citizens of the Turkish Republic through a nation-wide referendum. Immediately after the approval of the new settlement, the new state is a reality. There is no going back to the old state even if later on majorities in both the Kurdish and Turkish areas overwhelmingly vote to do so. Under the provisions of the Plan, Turkey becomes a bi-zonal and bi-communal federal state in which 37% of its land passes to the new government of the Kurds. The new federal state is misnamed “United Turkey Republic” and under the new Constitution, the two major ethnic groups (Turkish and Kurdish) have equal representation in the proposed Senate regardless of unequal populations. Under the above provision, the state comes to a standstill.
The Supreme Court consists of an equal number of Kurdish (18% of the population) and Turkish judges (80% of population) plus three foreign judges; thus, foreign players would cast deciding votes. Since a hierarchy of laws does not exist, the federation is an actual confederation in which the component states are the source of laws for the central authority and not the other way around! One must have in mind that the reason the United States had abandoned its original confederation structure was because it was not workable. The Constitution of the United States established in 1789 gave clear federal supremacy over the laws of its constituent states. All state laws in the United States originate from federal laws.
Turkish and Kurdish populations are displaced, each moving to the other's pertinent ethnic territory. Time restrictions on the right of free and permanent installation of Turks back to their homes and properties in the Kurdish state are imposed; Kurds have no restrictions. Those Turks who choose to live in their old homes in regions under the Kurdish administration have no local civil rights because only Kurds may elect the political representatives of the Kurdish state. In addition, the Turks that stayed in the Kurdish lands will never be allowed to make up more than 6% of the population in any single village. In this manner, Turks are prevented from setting up their own schools and are even unable to give birth once this quota is reached!

http://www.hellenicnews.com/readnews.html?newsid=10302&lang=US



I heard erdie and Co. fell head over heels on this plan...so when is the beacon of democracy, turkey :lol: , implementing it?... 8)
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Re: What If: The Annan Plan and Turkey

Postby umit07 » Sun Jun 14, 2009 6:38 am

boomerang wrote:so when is the beacon of democracy, turkey :lol: , implementing it?... 8)



In conjunction to the article posted above, the Annan Plan may be on the table for Turkey under the following circumstances.

The Kurdish population take full control over eastern Turkey, amounting to 37% of Turkey. Forming a Kurdish state, called the Kurdish Republic of Eastern Anatolia.

*The Indigenous Turkish inhabitants being expelled to the west.
*The Kurds forming allegiance with the Americans to provide them with weapons and Political support over their newly founded lands
*Last but not least the Kurds having the manpower to keep the their borders secure, in this sort of situation at least a million troops.
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Re: What If: The Annan Plan and Turkey

Postby Byron » Sun Jun 14, 2009 3:09 pm

umit07 wrote:
boomerang wrote:so when is the beacon of democracy, turkey :lol: , implementing it?... 8)



In conjunction to the article posted above, the Annan Plan may be on the table for Turkey under the following circumstances.

The Kurdish population take full control over eastern Turkey, amounting to 37% of Turkey. Forming a Kurdish state, called the Kurdish Republic of Eastern Anatolia.

*The Indigenous Turkish inhabitants being expelled to the west.
*The Kurds forming allegiance with the Americans to provide them with weapons and Political support over their newly founded lands
*Last but not least the Kurds having the manpower to keep the their borders secure, in this sort of situation at least a million troops.


And when you pass GO you collect 200 !!! :roll:
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Postby AWE » Sun Jun 14, 2009 3:36 pm

with the UN having deployed Peacekeepers 10 year prior to the split.
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Re: What If: The Annan Plan and Turkey

Postby Piratis » Tue Jun 16, 2009 10:13 pm

umit07 wrote:
boomerang wrote:so when is the beacon of democracy, turkey :lol: , implementing it?... 8)



In conjunction to the article posted above, the Annan Plan may be on the table for Turkey under the following circumstances.

The Kurdish population take full control over eastern Turkey, amounting to 37% of Turkey. Forming a Kurdish state, called the Kurdish Republic of Eastern Anatolia.

*The Indigenous Turkish inhabitants being expelled to the west.
*The Kurds forming allegiance with the Americans to provide them with weapons and Political support over their newly founded lands
*Last but not least the Kurds having the manpower to keep the their borders secure, in this sort of situation at least a million troops.


All of these are possible. (But it will be called Kurdistan). The Americans already have good relations with the Kurds in north Iraq, the Kurds sit on top of a lot of oil, and with the rate they multiply they will soon be more than the Turks so they will not have any manpower problem.

Unlike the TCs in north Cyprus, the Kurds are the indigenous people of the Kurdistan area, and they also constitute the majority of the population of this area. Therefore there will be no need to expel any Turks, and the result will be a separate Kurdish state (with a Turkish minority), and no need for any "Annan plan" to cover up any ethnic cleansing and human rights violations (since Kurdistan can be independent without any ethnic cleansing and without violating the human rights of anybody)
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