“At the time, independence was a compromise none of the conflicting sides had wanted or demanded,” said Hubert Faustmann, professor of political science at the University of Nicosia.
The Mediterranean island, now home to a combined population of about 1.2 million, has been a prized possession for a succession of empires through the ages. Modern history has left it split between a Greek-speaking south and a Turkish-speaking north.
“Two British bases, a mess of a constitution when they left, and then Turkish occupation — what independence?” asked Georgios Afxentiou, a Greek Cypriot restaurateur on Nicosia’s popular Ledra Street.
Today a busy pedestrian thoroughfare behind the capital’s ancient Venetian walls, Ledra was known as “Murder Mile” during the bloody Greek Cypriot guerrilla war against British squaddies in the late 1950.
The island’s majority Greek Cypriot community had fought in 1955-1959 for Enosis, a long-yearned union with “motherland” Greece.
It finally accepted Britain’s offer of independence in 1960, conditional on London retaining sovereignty over two coastal bases, before intercommunal bloodshed and Turkey’s 1974 invasion of northern Cyprus.
String of empires
The handover came on the night of August 15-16, 1960 from Britain’s last governor, Sir Hugh Foot, to Cyprus’s first president, Greek-Orthodox Archbishop Makarios.
Independence ended centuries of domination by a string of empires, including the Assyrians, Persians, Greeks and Romans, and finally the British who valued its strategic location, especially after the Suez disaster of 1956. Ties between the Republic of Cyprus, now an EU member, and the UK have remained strong since independence.
British visitors are the bread and butter of the holiday island’s tourism industry, though the novel coronavirus is keeping most of them at bay this summer.
Independence day on Sunday, when most Cypriots will themselves take to the beaches, is “not really important”, said Giannis Ioannou, founder of the think-tank Geopolitical Cyprus.
The Republic of Cyprus moved formal commemorations to October 1 for “practical reasons”, Ioannou added, pointing to the searing mid-August heat and a key Christian religious holiday.
Turkish Cypriots celebrate the declaration of their internationally-unrecognised statelet on November 15, 1983, nine years after Ankara invaded following a coup backed by the junta then ruling Greece.
Rather than the end of British rule “they also celebrated the arrival of Turkish soldiers” 60 years ago, said Turkish Cypriot halloumi cheese factory owner Mahmut Erden, referring to pre-independence treaties which brought in Greek and Turkish mainland contingents as “guarantors”.
Professor Ahmet Sozen, chair of political sciences at the Eastern Mediterranean University in Famagusta, northern Cyprus, said: “For more than 90 percent of Turkish Cypriots, it (August 16) does not mean anything. People do not even know it.”
Barbed wire and sandbags
With a mixture of ethnicities left behind by a wealth of civilisations on the island, the late Turkish Cypriot leader Rauf Denktash is famously reputed to have said “the only true Cypriot is the Cyprus donkey”.
“Cyprus has only really had an embedded sense of self since 2004,” when it joined the European Union, said Professor James Ker-Lindsay of the London School of Economics.
“Often called the reluctant republic … Cyprus does not carry independence as a badge of honour,” unlike other former colonies, he said.
After six decades, it still lacks unifying symbols such as a national anthem of its own.
The flag, featuring the island’s map and symbols of peace on a white background, was designed as a temporary emblem by a Turkish Cypriot art teacher. It remains in use today only in the south but is vastly outnumbered across Cyprus by flags of either Greece or Turkey.
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