insan wrote:Gregory wrote::lol: a bunch of tc's who have probably personally profitted from selling off GC land are now getting their g-strings wet because GC refugees are building homes on GC land. Get it in your heads, they cannot sell this land. It remains the property of the TC's that left it and is under ownership by the committee of TC land. The govt cannot commit such an action. You know why?
Because we're B-E-T-T-E-R than you.
We're a recognised member state of the EU
We hold the Presidency of the EU in 3 years
The most you'll ever hold is the Whizz world football cup of unrecognised states.
You're so far behind we need a new word for the word backward for you.
Get it in your heads, we're not idiots stop hoping and stop stealing. Then maybe someday someone might show some respect to that opportunistic gypsy race that the TC's have become.
Do not think that all these years of selling land that does not belong to you will not create an everlasting reputation on your people.
Hope u experience living under isolations for 40 years,
I bet someone like u would even sell his mom and sisters.
No dear ... we leave that business to you ...
Turkish girls sold to Arabs
Cyprus Observer 15 May 2009
‘Girls sold to the Arabs’ is a tragedy which has been heard about and spoken about by Turkish Cypriots for generations but there aren't many details about the essence of the issue, about why and how it happened.
Under which conditions did Turkish Cypriots, who are known as loving parents, sell their children? and most importantly, what did those girls live through?
Two Turkish Cypriot journalists, Neriman Cahit and Eralp Adanir, were curious about this issue and they started researching. During their research on the island, scans through libraries and scientific sources proved to be insufficient, so they went directly to the source of the problem.
Journalist Neriman Cahit and TV producer Eralp Adanir went to Amman with the help of the Emel-Isam Muhareb family and interviewed the Turkish Cypriot women who were given to the Arabs as brides. They found some of these women, who are in their seventies, in Palestine Refugee Camps. They spoke to the children and grandchildren of some.
Neriman Cahit and Eralp Adanir are preparing to publish the result of their interviews and research with all the details and they say: “The amount of information we gathered in Amman in one week could not be obtained in Cyprus in several years. It is an unbelievable tragedy(...)
http://europenews.dk/en/node/23102