


The Republic of
Cyprus
The general tone of the
agreements was one of compromise. Greek Cypriots, especially members
of organizations such as EOKA, expressed disappointment because
enosis had not been attained. Turkish Cypriots, however, welcomed
the agreements and set aside their earlier defensive demand for
partition. According to the Treaty of Establishment, Britain
retained sovereignty over about 256 square kilometers, which became
the Dhekelia Sovereign Base Area, to the northwest of Larnaca, and
the Akrotiri Sovereign Base Area to the west of Limassol. Britain
also retained certain access and communications routes.
According to
constitutional arrangements, Cyprus was to become an independent
republic with a Greek Cypriot president and a Turkish Cypriot
vice-president; a council of ministers with a ratio of seven Greeks
to three Turks and a House of Representatives of fifty members, also
with a seven-to-three ratio, were to be separately elected by
communal balloting on a universal suffrage basis. The judicial
system would be headed by a Supreme Constitutional Court, composed
of one Greek Cypriot and one Turkish Cypriot and presided over by a
contracted judge from a neutral country. In addition, separate Greek
Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot Communal Chambers were provided to
exercise control in matters of religion, culture, and education. The
entire structure of government was strongly bicommunal in
composition and function, and thus perpetuated the distinctiveness
and separation of the two communities.
The aspirations of the
Greek Cypriots, for which they had fought during the emergency, were
not realized. Cyprus would not be united with Greece, as most of the
population had hoped, but neither would it be partitioned, which
many had feared. The unsatisfactory but acceptable alternative was
independence. The Turkish Cypriot community, which had fared very
well at the bargaining table, accepted the agreements willingly. The
provisions of the constitution and the new republic's territorial
integrity were ensured by Britain, Greece, and Turkey under the
Treaty of Guarantee. The Treaty of Alliance gave Greece and Turkey
the rights to station military forces on the island (950 and 650
men, respectively). These forces were to be separate from Cypriot
national forces, numbering 2,000 men in a six-to-four ratio of Greek
Cypriots to Turkish Cypriots (see Armed
Forces , ch. 5).
Makarios, accepting
independence as the pragmatic course, returned to Cyprus on March 1,
1959. Grivas, still an ardent supporter of enosis, agreed to return
to Greece after having obtained amnesty for his followers. The state
of emergency was declared over on December 4, 1959. Nine days later,
Makarios was elected president, despite opposition from right-wing
elements who claimed that he had betrayed enosis and from AKEL
members who objected to the British bases and the stationing of
Greek and Turkish troops on the island. On the same day, Fazil
Küçük, leader of the Turkish Cypriot community, was elected vice
president without opposition.
The first general
election for the House of Representatives took place on July 31,
1960. Of the thirty-five seats allotted to Greek Cypriots, thirty
were won by supporters of Makarios and five by AKEL candidates. The
fifteen Turkish Cypriot seats were all won by Küçük supporters. The
constitution became effective August 16, 1960, on the day Cyprus
formally shed its colonial status and became a republic. One month
later, the new republic became a member of the UN, and in the spring
of 1961 it was admitted to membership in the Commonwealth. In
December 1961, Cyprus became a member of the International Monetary
Fund ( IMF--see
Glossary) and the World
Bank (see Glossary).
Independence did not
ensure peace. Serious problems concerning the working and
interpretation of the constitutional system appeared immediately.
These problems reflected the sharp bicommunal division in the
constitution and the historical and continuing distrust between the
two communities. Turkish Cypriots, after eight decades of passivity
under the British, had become a political entity. In the words of
political scientist Nancy Crawshaw, "Turkish Cypriot nationalism,
barely perceptible under British rule, came to equal that of the
Greeks in fanaticism." One major point of contention concerned the
composition of units under the six-to-four ratio decreed for the
Cypriot army. Makarios wanted complete integration; Küçük favored
segregated companies. On October 20, 1961, Küçük used his
constitutional veto power as vicepresident to halt the development
of an integrated force. Makarios then stated that the country could
not afford an army anyway; planning and development of the national
army ceased. Other problems developed in the application of the
seven-to-three ratio of employment in government agencies.
Underground organizations
of both communities revived during 1961 and 1962. EOKA and the TMT
began training again, smuggling weapons in from Greece and Turkey,
and working closely with national military contingents from Greece
and Turkey that were stationed on the island in accordance with the
Treaty of Alliance. Friction increased in 1962 regarding the status
of municipalities. Each side accused the other of constitutional
infractions, and the Supreme Constitutional Court was asked to rule
on municipalities and taxes. The court's decisions were
unsatisfactory to both sides, and an impasse was reached. Government
under the terms of the 1960 constitution had come to appear
impossible to many Cypriots.
Some Greek Cypriots
believed the constitutional impasse could be ended through bold
action. Accordingly, a plan of action--the Akritas Plan--was drawn
up sometime in 1963 by the Greek Cypriot minister of the interior, a
close associate of Archbishop Makarios. The plan's course of action
began with persuading the international community that concessions
made to the Turkish Cypriots were too extensive and that the
constitution had to be reformed if the island were to have a
functioning government. World opinion had to be convinced that the
smaller community had nothing to fear from constitutional amendments
that gave Greek Cypriots political dominance. Another of the plan's
goals was the revocation of the Treaty of Guarantee and the Treaty
of Alliance. If these aims were realized, enosis would become
possible. If Turkish Cypriots refused to accept these changes and
attempted to block them by force, the plan foresaw their violent
subjugation "in a day or two" before foreign powers could intervene.
On November 30, 1963,
Makarios advanced a thirteen-point proposal designed, in his view,
to eliminate impediments to the functioning of the government. The
thirteen points involved constitutional revisions, including the
abandonment of the veto power by both the president and the vice
president, an idea that certainly would have been rejected by the
Turkish Cypriots, who thought of the veto as a form of life
insurance for the minority community. Küçük asked for time to
consider the proposal and promised to respond to it by the end of
December. Turkey rejected it on December 16, declaring the proposal
an attempt to undermine the
constitution.