


Political Developments
after the Crisis of 1967
Seizing the opportune
moment after the crisis had ended, in late December 1967 Turkish
Cypriot leaders announced the establishment of a "transitional
administration" to govern their community's affairs "until such time
as the provisions of the Constitution of 1960 have been fully
implemented." The body's president was Fazil Küçük, vice-president
of the republic; the body's vice-president was Rauf Denktas,
president of the Turkish Cypriot Communal Chamber. Nineteen
governing articles, called the Basic Principles, were announced, and
the provisional administration organized itself along lines that
were similar to a cabinet. The provisional administration also
formed a legislative assembly composed of the Turkish Cypriot
members-in-absentia of the republic's House of Representatives and
the members of the Turkish Cypriot Communal Chamber. The provisional
administration did not state that the Communal Chamber was being
abolished. Nor did it seek recognition as a government. Such actions
would have been contrary to the provisions of the constitution and
the Zurich-London agreements, and the Turkish Cypriots as well as
the Turks scrupulously avoided any such abrogation. The Greek
Cypriots immediately concluded that the formation of governing
bodies was in preparation for partition. U Thant was also critical
of the new organizations.
President Makarios,
seeking a fresh mandate from his constituency, announced in January
1968 that elections would be held during February. Küçük, determined
to adhere to the constitution, then announced that elections for
vice president would also be held. Elections were subsequently held
in the Turkish Cypriot community, which the Greek Cypriot government
considered invalid; Küçük was returned to office unopposed. Two
weeks later, Makarios received 220,911 votes (about 96 percent), and
his opponent, Takis Evdokas, running on a straight enosis platform,
received 8,577 votes. Even though there were 16,215 abstentions,
Makarios's overwhelming victory was seen as a massive endorsement of
his personal leadership and of an independent Cyprus. At his
investiture, the president stated that the Cyprus problem could not
be solved by force, but had to be worked out within the framework of
the UN. He also said that he and his followers wanted to live
peacefully in a unitary state where all citizens enjoyed equal
rights. Some Cypriots opposed Makarios's conciliatory stance, and
there would be an unsuccessful attempt to assassinate him in 1970.
In mid-1968 intercommunal
talks under UN auspices began in Beirut. Glafkos Clerides, president
of the House of Representatives, and Rauf Denktas were involved in
the first stages of these talks, which lasted until 1974. Although
many points of agreement were arrived at, no lasting agreements were
reached. Turkish Cypriot proposals emphasized the importance of the
local government of each ethnic community at the expense of the
central government, while the Greek Cypriot negotiating teams
stressed the dominance of the central authorities over local
administration.
In the parliamentary
elections that took place on July 5, 1970, fifteen seats went to the
Unified Democratic Party (Eniaion), nine to AKEL, seven to the
Progressive Coalition, two to the socialist coalition, and two to
the Independents. The enosis opposition did not capture any seats.
Eniaion, led by Clerides and based on an urban constituency, was a
moderate party of the right that generally supported Makarios. The
Progressive Coalition had an ideological base almost the same as
Eniaion's, but was based in the rural areas. The socialist group was
led by Vassos Lyssarides, personal physician to Makarios; its two
seats in the House of Representatives did not reflect its
significant influence in Cypriot affairs and the personal power of
its leader. The Independents were a left-wing noncommunist group
similar to EDEK but lacking its dynamic leadership. The fifteen
seats reserved for Turkish Cypriots went to followers of Denktas.
In the early 1970s,
Cyprus was in fact a partitioned country. Makarios was the president
of the republic, but his authority did not extend into the Turkish
enclaves. The House of Representatives sat as the legislature, but
only the thirty-five Greek Cypriot seats were functioning as part of
a central government. De facto, the partition sought for years by
Turks and Turkish Cypriots existed, but intercommunal strife had not
ended.
In the summer of 1971,
tension built up between the two communities, and incidents became
more numerous. Sometime in the late summer or early fall, Grivas
(who had attacked Makarios as a traitor in an Athens newspaper)
returned secretly to the island and began to rebuild his guerrilla
organization, which became known as the National Organization of
Cypriot Fighters (Ethniki Organosis Kyprion Agonistan B--EOKA B).
Three new newspapers advocating enosis were also established at the
same time. All of these activities were funded by the military junta
that controlled Greece. The junta probably would have agreed to some
form of partition similar to the Acheson Plan to settle the Cyprus
question, but at the time the overthrow of Makarios was the primary
objective, and the junta backed Grivas toward that end. Grivas, from
hiding, directed terrorist attacks and propaganda assaults that
shook the Makarios government, but the president remained a
powerful, popular leader.
In January 1972, a new
crisis rekindled intercommunal tensions when an Athens newspaper
reported that the Makarios government had received a shipment of
Czechoslovakian arms. The guns were intended for Makarios's own
elite guard; the Greek government, hoping to overthrow Makarios
through Grivas, EOKA B, and the National Guard, objected to the
import of the arms. The authorities in Ankara were more than willing
to join Athens in such a protest, and both governments demanded that
the Czechoslovakian munitions be turned over to UNFICYP. Makarios
was eventually forced to comply.
Relations between Nicosia
and Athens were at such a low ebb that the colonels of the Greek
junta, recognizing that they had Makarios in a perilous position,
issued an ultimatum for him to reform his government and rid it of
ministers who had been critical of the junta. The colonels, however,
had not reckoned with the phenomenal popularity of the archbishop,
and once again mass demonstrations proved that Makarios had the
people behind him. In the end, however, Makarios bowed to Greek
pressure and reshuffled the cabinet.
Working against Makarios
was the fact that most officers of the Cypriot National Guard were
Greek regulars who supported the junta and its desire to remove him
from office and achieve some degree of enosis. Grivas was also a
threat to the archbishop. He remained powerful and to some extent
was independent of the junta that had permitted his return to
Cyprus. While the Greek colonels were at times prepared to make a
deal with Turkey about Cyprus, Grivas was ferociously opposed to any
arrangement that did not lead to complete enosis.
In the spring of 1972,
Makarios faced an attack from another quarter. The three bishops of
the Church of Cyprus demanded that he resign as president, because
his temporal duties violated canon law. Moving astutely, Markarios
foiled the three bishops and had them defrocked in the summer of
1973. Before choosing their replacements, he increased the number of
bishoprics to five, thereby reducing the power of individual
bishops.
Grivas and his one-track
pursuit of enosis through terrorism had become an embarrassment to
the Greek Cypriot government, as well as to the Greek government
that had sponsored his return to the island. His fame and popularity
in both countries, however, prevented his removal. That problem was
solved on January 27, 1974, when the general died of a heart attack.
Makarios granted his followers an amnesty, hoping that EOKA B would
disappear after the death of its leader. Terrorism continued,
however, and the 100,000 mourners who attended Grivas's funeral
indicated the enduring popularity of his political
aims.