Saturday, October 25, 2008

Famagusta

Wikipedia

During the second phase of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus of 14 August 1974 the Mesaoria plain was overrun by Turkish tanks and in two days the Turkish Army was in Famagusta. The town had been completely evacuated by its Greek population who fled before the invading army and after the town had been bombed by the Turkish air force.

Unlike other parts of Turkish-controlled Cyprus, the Varosha section of Famagusta was sealed off by the Turkish army immediately after being captured and remains in that state today. The Greek Cypriots who had fled from Varosha were not allowed to return, and journalists are banned. It has been frozen in time with department stores still full of clothes, now many years out of fashion, and hotels empty but still fully equipped. Swedish journalist Jan-Olof Bengtsson, who visited the Swedish UN battalion in Famagusta port and saw the sealed-off part of the town from the battalion’s observation post, called the area a 'ghost town'. He wrote in Kvällsposten on September 24, 1977),
"The asphalt on the roads has cracked in the warm sun and along the sidewalks bushes are growing [...] Today, September 1977, the breakfast tables are still set, the laundry still hanging and the lamps still burning [...] Famagusta is a ghost-town."
Turkish Cypriots continue to live north of Varosha, especially in the walled city. These sections of Famagusta remain vibrant with many fascinating buildings. The city is also home to the Eastern Mediterranean University.
The current mayor-in-exile of Famagusta is Alexis Galanos. Oktay Kayalp heads the Turkish-controlled municipal administration. There have been suggestions from the Cypriot Government to transfer Varosha to UN administration, allow the return of the refugees, and open the harbour for use by both communities. However, the Turkish Cypriot side and Turkey rejected them. Varosha would have returned to Greek Cypriot control as part of the Annan Plan for Cyprus had the plan not been rejected by Greek Cypriot voters.
The population of the city before 1974 was 39,000. Of this number, 26,500 were Greek Cypriots, 8,500 Turkish Cypriots and 4,000 from other ethnic groups. After the invasion, in 1975, the population was 8,500, all of them Turks. Today the population that lives in the town is 39,000. The number does not include the Greek Cypriot legal inhabitants but the Turkish Cypriots and settlers who live there.






המחסום בחוף הים. בקומה הראשונה מימין של המלון הימני אפשר לראות עמדה.

הגדר מסביב לוורושה. הלכתי הרבה לאורכה ולקחתי תמונות עד שהחלטתי לוותר על ההזדמנות לבקר בבית מעצר צבאי טורקי.

אחרי זה ניסיתי לחזור דרך הגבול הקרוב ללרנקה, שממנו יצאתי בבוקר. הצד הטורקי נתן לי לצאת, ואז בכניסה לקפריסין הדרומית, במעבר שהוא באזור בשליטה בריטית, עמדו שני שוטרים או משהו ולא נתנו לי לעבור. התווכחתי איתם קצת. איך אתה יכול לא לתת לי לעבוד כשאין כאן גבול בכלל?
- יש פה גבול
- אבל אתה לא מכיר בו. אתה בריטי?
- זה מסובך
- מה אתה בכלל? יווני?
- אני קפריסאי טורקי, הוא קפריסאי יווני.
- ושניכם עובדים ביחד באזור הבריטי שבצד היווני של הגבול הלא קיים?
- אמרתי לך שזה מסובך

נאלצתי לנסוע ללפקוסיה/ניקוסיה. אני מקוה שפה יתנו לי לעבור. אם הכל ילך בסדר ולא יעצרו אותי לא פה ולא בנמל, אפליג ב29 מלימסול לחיפה

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