74LB wrote:Get Real! wrote:YFred wrote:Where was your legal and legitimate government and their implementation of human rights when Aysozomeno was surrounded by the relatives of certain members on this forum after 63 about to be slaughtered when Lurucadis went to their rescue. Was TMT in Aysozomeno Bodamya or Dali encouraging the TCs to leave their land and move to Lurucina? Like hell it was.
It looks like mommy & daddy have been lying to you again...
“Next morning a band of 50 armed Turkish Cypriots arrived to escort the 200 survivors of Ayios Sozomenos to the nearest Turkish strongpoint at Louroujina, four miles away.”
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/artic ... 34,00.htmlThey felt they would be killed and left everything behind and sought refuge where they could.
They left by their own volition AFTER the gunfight was over because somebody “encouraged” them to…In the case of Aysozomeno they were surrounded about to be killed. How many houses are there in Aysozomeno now? Why were they flattened? is it covered under GC human rights?
For 45 year old abandoned mud houses they look pretty upright to me...
http://www.panoramio.com/user/823314/ta ... 0SOZOMENOSWrite to N Kizilyurek and ask him why his family moved from Bodamya to Lurucina after 63.
His story will most likely be like yours.... full of lies and deception!
Luckily, this TIME article is testimony of the facts by the first independent reporter on the scene.
Quit fibbing and making a fool of yourself Y-Fronts...
The full article, rather than snippets .........
CYPRUS Death at High Noon One sunny morning last week, a Land-Rover carrying seven Greek Cypriots bounced up the road to the tiny village of Ayios Sozomenos. Though only twelve miles distant from the capital city of Nicosia, the village is centuries away in time. To reach it, one travels four miles along a rutted road off the main asphalt highway and then some two miles over goat trails before the cluster of tile-roofed houses is dis covered crowded between a dry watercourse and a steep mesa of grey rock.
The Greeks say the men in the Land-Rover had intended to turn on a water pump that serves a nearby town, but were ambushed by Turkish Cypriots hidden in the dry riverbed. The Turks charge that the men in the Land-Rover opened fire on the village shepherds, who replied with their shotguns. With two dead and two wounded, the Land-Rover raced out of range, called for help. Greek Cypriots, armed with a variety of weapons, poured from neighboring villages. By noon they had surrounded Ayios Sozomenos and begun a battle that raged for five hours. At last, British troops, assigned the nearly impossible task of keeping the peace between the island's 500,000 Greek and 100,000 Turkish Cypriots, arrived in sufficient force to compel a ceasefire.
Pitchfork Charge. TIME Correspondent Robert Ball watched the fighting from a nearby hillside, then entered the village to see the grisly results. His report: "The bitterest fighting was at the western edge of the village, where the attacking Greeks had the cover of gnarled olive trees. In one mud-brick hut, where nine Turks had taken refuge, a window was blasted by a bazooka-type rocket, and the second floor literally sieved with bullet holes. In desperation, one Turkish shepherd tried to flee to the riverbed, but was cut down a few feet from the door. Another grabbed a pitchfork, made a futile, one-man assault on the Greek position, and was mowed down at once.
"Altogether the Turks lost seven dead and several wounded, but they gave a good account of themselves with their shotguns, killing a total of six of the better-armed Greeks and wounding eleven. Next morning a band of 50 armed Turkish Cypriots arrived to escort the 200 survivors of Ayios Sozomenos to the nearest Turkish strongpoint at Louroujina, four miles away. As the villagers moved silently off with their flocks of sheep and few cattle, one member of the Turkish rescue column pleaded with a British lieutenant, 'Please take the dead to Louroujina. We came to save the living. If you do not take the dead, they will be eaten by dogs.' "
Alpeis wrote:Well today I still see the ENOSIS slogan by Greeks everywhere on Web. It's not hard to see that many still keep the idea alive. I don't know why you got upset as well. On the other hand, don't you know on which mountain it was written? It was still out there - 14 years after 1960 -until Turkish army intervened...
kurupetos wrote:Alpeis wrote:Well today I still see the ENOSIS slogan by Greeks everywhere on Web. It's not hard to see that many still keep the idea alive. I don't know why you got upset as well. On the other hand, don't you know on which mountain it was written? It was still out there - 14 years after 1960 -until Turkish army intervened...
Nice, they deleted one rubbish to replace it with another one!
Oracle wrote:Alpeis is an anti-intellectual. He has decided (much like the Peoples of the Middle Ages) that he has to brainwash us into accepting his doctrine .... that he thinks it's better for us to accept his segregationist view than to carry on improving and questioning, as modern day Humans, wishing to restore Law and Order ...
He would have argued that the Earth is FLAT because that is how it LOOKS!
He would have argued that the Sun goes round the Earth ... because that is how it LOOKS ...
He is incapable of adapting ... What a Turk!
Alpeis wrote:Oracle wrote:Alpeis is an anti-intellectual. He has decided (much like the Peoples of the Middle Ages) that he has to brainwash us into accepting his doctrine .... that he thinks it's better for us to accept his segregationist view than to carry on improving and questioning, as modern day Humans, wishing to restore Law and Order ...
He would have argued that the Earth is FLAT because that is how it LOOKS!
He would have argued that the Sun goes round the Earth ... because that is how it LOOKS ...
He is incapable of adapting ... What a Turk!
Did I say that I am a Turk? I am a Turkish Citizen of Greek origin. Father Greek, mum Turkish. I hate to label people as something.
I can't see a doctrine here as well. I am trying to be as nice as I can, but somehow you tend to take everything as a threat.
Oracle wrote:Alpeis wrote:Did I say that I am a Turk?Alpeis wrote:I am a Turkish citizen and have moved to North Cyprus nearly two years ago.
.... Yes!
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