

Developments Since
1974
The de facto partition of
Cyprus resulting from the Turkish invasion, or intervention, as the
Turks preferred to call their military action, caused much suffering
in addition to the thousands of dead, many of whom were unaccounted
for even years later. An estimated one-third of the population of
each ethnic community had to flee their homes. The island's economy
was devastated.
Efforts were undertaken
immediately to remedy the effects of the catastrophe. Intensive
government economic planning and intervention on both sides of the
island soon improved living standards and allowed the construction
of housing for refugees. Both communities benefited greatly from the
expansion of the tourist industry, which brought millions of foreign
visitors to the island during the 1980s. The economic success of the
Republic of Cyprus was significant enough to seem almost miraculous.
Within just a few years, the refugees had housing and were
integrated in the bustling economy, and Greek Cypriots enjoyed a
West European standard of living. Turkish Cypriots did not do as
well, but, working against an international embargo imposed by the
Republic of Cyprus and benefiting from extensive Turkish aid, they
managed to ensure a decent standard of living for all members of
their community--a standard of living, in fact, that was higher than
that of Turkey. Both communities established government agencies to
provide public assistance to those who needed it and built modern
education systems extending to the university level.
The
owners of Riviera - Family
Onuray, migrated from South to North Cyprus in 1974 right after the
Turkish Peace Operation. They had hard times and finally in 1978,
they established The Riviera Beach
Bungalows & Studios, formerly known as Riviera Mocamp, in
Karaoglanoglu Village, 3 km west of Girne (Kyrenia). At the
beginning, the Family Onuray have started the business as a camping
site with only 12 hotel rooms and restaurant. In time, they managed
to increase the bed capacity up to 104. Nowadays, The Riviera is one
of the most popular holiday resort in Northern Cyprus.
Both communities soon
developed political systems on the European model, with parties
representing mainstream political opinion from right to the left.
Greek Cypriots had two older parties dating from before 1970, the
Progressive Party of the Working People (Anorthotikon Komma
Ergazomenou Laou--AKEL) and the United Democratic Union of Cyprus
(Eniea Demokratiki Enosis Kyprou- -EDEK), and some formed after the
events of 1974. The two most important of these newer parties were
the Democratic Party (Dimokratiko Komma--DIKO) and the Democratic
Rally (Dimokratikos Synagermos--DISY). Both of these parties were on
the right, with DIKO headed by Spyros Kyprianou, who replaced
Makarios as president after the latter's death in 1977, and DISY led
by veteran politician Glafkos Clerides. Parliamentary elections held
in 1976, 1981, and 1985 resulted in stable patterns in the House of
Representatives that permitted coalition-building and a serious
opposition to the government in power (see table
3, Republic of Cyprus: Parliamentary Elections Results,
1976-85). Kyprianou was reelected president in 1983, but lost in
1988 to George Vassiliou, a successful businessman and a political
outsider who had the support of AKEL and EDEK. Vassiliou won
election by promising to bring a new spirit to politics and break
the deadlocked negotiations to end the island's division.
The Turkish Cypriots'
progress to parliamentary democracy was not as easy. First they had
to build a new state. In 1975 the "Turkish Federated State of
Cyprus" was proclaimed. In 1983, by means of a unilateral
declaration of independence, Turkish Cypriots created the "Turkish
Republic of Northern Cyprus" ("TRNC"), but by the early 1990s, only
Turkey had recognized it as a nation. Rauf Denktas, who had been the
political leader of the Turkish Cypriot community since the 1970s,
was elected president of the "TRNC." A number of political parties
were active in the area occupied by the "TRNC." They included both
left- and right-wing parties, which both supported and opposed the
settlement of mainland Turks on the island and the politics of
partition. The largest party, the National Unity Party (Ulusal
Birlik Partisi--UBP), was founded and controlled by Denktas (see table
4, "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus": Parliamentary Election
Results, 1976-90). The UBP supported a resolutely separatist stance.
The second party of the "TRNC," the Communal Liberation Party
(Toplumcu Kurtulus Partisi-- TKP) advocated closer relations with
the Greek Cypriot community. The left-wing Republican Turkish Party
(Cumhuriyetçi Türk Partisi-- CTP) was even more forthright in its
opposition to the government's policy of restricted relations with
the Republic of Cyprus.
Negotiations began in the
mid-1970s to end the de facto partition and to bring the two
communities together again. Two major compromises on the part of the
Republic of Cyprus occurred in the second half of the 1970s. First,
in 1977, four guidelines for future intercommunal talks were
accepted by both communities; their thrust was that Cyprus would
become a bicommunal federal republic, a departure from the terms of
the constitution of 1960. Second, the ten-point agreement of 1979,
achieved at a meeting between Kyprianou and Denktas, worked out
policies to ease further intercommunal talks.
A possible settlement was
missed in 1985 when Kyprianou refused to sign a recently worked-out
accord, fearing it conceded too much to the other side. The
stalemate continued up to the election of Vassiliou in 1988.
Agreement on some major points had slowly evolved, but the practical
steps to realize an actual settlement were still not attainable.
Differences in the two communities' view of the desirable mixture of
federation or confederation and the powers of a central government
seemed unbridgeable.