MicAtCyp wrote: I think we already presented our views that the communities don't have a self determination right.
You have presented those views and to me they remain they core problem then and now. Under your theisis that there are not two seperate peoples but just a single unifed cypriot people (that is clearly nothing but a fictional idea not represented by any realites back in the 60s or now) GC get every right that they would have as a seperate people by dint of their numerical superiority AND they get a
right to dominate the TC people by the same means. Under my thesis each community would have its rights as a people equally respected. This is why we fear GC domination, because by insiting that there is and can only be a single cypriot people you also insist on a
right to dominate through numbers the TC people in cyprus. Any autonomy or self determination you then give TC is a gift and a sign of the benevloence of the GC and not a basic fundamental right of the TC people.
MicAtCyp wrote:So for the sake of discussion we assume the TC are a different nation, and can decide what they will do.Remember we are now in the 60s. Then what? Should they declare any mixed village around cyprus a half town of a state? Which state anyway, what are its boundaries?Should they declare any non mixed village a part of that state? Should they all move to one side of Cyprus through buying-selling-massive moving on a compulsory basis until they form boundaries for a state of their own?Or should they demand 30-40-50% of the Political power of Cyprus, and the other group of self determinators the GCs should be oblidged to offer them whatever they demanded? Explain me these Erol and then lets go to todays situation.***
I am not arguing that the TC were or are or should be a seperate nation - just that we are a seperate and distinct peoples. There is a big difference. If you could accept this (in your heart) then a solution becomes possible. We then have two distinct peoples living in a single geographical Island who both respect each others rights as a 'people'. In such a senario a single nation can be built that accpets these ideas and involves a degree of give and take on both sides. This is what the 1960 constitution represented. The problem was the GC administration accepted a settlement based on such ideas but never accepted the equality of the two peoples in their heart. They accepted it on the baisis that they could force a reversal of this acceptance through numerical superiority which is what they tried to do.
Just because you accept that the TC are a people that does not mean that there has to be two seperate nations at all. There could have been a unifed single nation that encorporated the two seperate peoples as peoples and acknowledged their rights as peoples. What it required however was an acceptance of the equality of these two seperate peoples in GC and TC hearts and a will to make a unifed state work on this basis. Unfortunately there was no such acceptance or such a will to make it work. In reality is was this insistance that the TC were not a people but just a minority in cyprus that has lead to a de facto situation of two seperate nations today and it is this continued inistance of this that keeps Cyprus from being united imo.
MicAtCyp wrote:So we will then have two completely separate states one consisting of 18% of the geographical area of Cyprus and another of 82% each one minding its own bussiness. Is this what you Erol are aiming at? If yes then say it clearly.
No this is not what I am aming at. My whole point is that the current situation (ignoring the %) is the result of your refusal to accept that the TC are a 'people' in Cyprus back in the 60's and still today. Until you are willing to accept the equality and rights of TC as a people (in your heart) as partners in a united Cyprus you simply re inforce the current status quo, just as such refusal in the past lead to the physical seperation of the two peoples in the first place.
MicAtCyp wrote:PS*** If you manage to convince me then we may propose the same thing to the black people of USA.You know they are about 20% of the population there a very similar case like ours.
If you read the 'learned opinions' in the link I posted before about this complex issue of defining what a 'people' means and represents it is clear that there are two basic approaches. One seeks to define a people based on a set of criteria and the other on the basis of 'all people within a state'. So where a single unifed (sovreign) state existed before the introduction of a minority people it is appropriate to use the 'single state' approach imo. This is why I do not believe african or black americans are a 'people' in terms of human rights definitions or the ethnic groups that exist in the UK for another example. However where the existance of these peoples pre dates the existance of the state then it is ludicrous to me to argue that the 'single state' approach is the appropriate one. In such a case the only appropriate appraoch to establish if a group is a 'people' or not is the 'criteria list' approach. I would also point out that one of the 'criteria' in this approach is 'numbers' - which is why I maintain the TC are a 'people' within Cyprus but the marionites or other ehtnic groups that represent less than 1% of the population are not. It is also worth pointing out that in the USA those ethinc groups that pre date the state of the USA (namely indigenous indians) are recognised as a people and have significant sovreignty and self determination as a result of this right (which is a much more relevant comparrsion to the USA and cyprus than Piratis' constant 'bleating' that a federation should be like it is in the USA - a nonsense because the USA does not contain seperate peoples that pre date the state and where it does they are granted appropriate rights).
I see no fairness, or logic or justification in your assertion that the TC are not a people within Cyprus - based on the 'single state' argument. All I see is convience and a demand and insistance for a right of GC to dominate TC in cyprus.
PS I would also add this same logic and reasoning is why I believe the Kurds should be recognised as a people and treated accordingly. They pre date the formation of the states in which they live - thus should be judged not on the 'single state' approach but on the 'criteria list' approach (which they clearly meet). I believe that for the same reasons that Turkey supports the rights of a TC people in Cyprus they should also support the rights of a Kurdish people in Turkey (and elsewhere). I condem this incosistency in Turkish policy (just as I condem incosistnecy elsewhere).