Lordo wrote:Are you saying that kucuk did not tell inonu that if they go back they would be killed. one never knows why one say what they say. i can only guess that perhaps inonu did not believe what kucuk was telling him or that he wanted them killed and then use the excuse to invade. who knows we will never know.
but kindly answer the question. after the 22 dec 1963 murder of the zeki and cemaliye incident please tell us the earliest date which kucuk could have returned to the government. be my guest the floor is yours but dont kill us from laughter is all i ask.
Old man we are not interested of what happened 50 years ago when you were a TMT Malaka fighting with other Eoka Malaka, Instead of screwing women you were all masturbating
As for their retutning to the parliamant this is the Truth behind it:
Immediately after the collapse of the Zurich agreements in December 1963, the Turkish government under Prime Minister Inonu urged the Turkish Cypriots to return to the Republic of Cyprus. In a letter to Vice President Fazil Kucuk dated March 9, 1964, Ismet Inonu called upon him to seek an understanding with President Makarios and return to the government, with the Vice President and Ministers leading, and the Ministers, the Representatives and later, the civil servants, following.
Kucuk replied the next day, saying that this was impossible, citing a crisis of confidence and fear,and claiming that if he insisted, the Turkish Cypriot officials would resign their posts.
The Turkish government of the day was in conflict with the Turkish Army and desired the implementation of the Zurich agreements. That is why they forced Rauf Denktash to remain exiled in Turkey from 1964 until 1968. The Turkish Cypriot leadership and the paramilitary organisation TMT were under the influence of the army, which desired the division of Cyprus.
The Turkish Cypriots were unwilling to return to the Republic of Cyprus, but the Greek Cypriots were also unwilling to accept them. As early as March 1964, the Greek Cypriot leadership had renounced independence, and set its sights on immediate union with Greece. Until this was achieved, the Greek Cypriots treated the Republic of Cyprus as a purely Greek state, unilaterally abolishing those provisions of the Constitution which secured the bicommunality of the state. The Turkish Cypriot response to this was to demand immediate implementation of the Constitution, which forbade union with any other country and secured the rights and privileges the Turkish Cypriots had achieved in 1960.