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Türkei zerstört und plündert Kirchen in Zypern

Habe schon viele Menschen im Leben erleben können aber dieser sonderbarer Fall hier hat wirklich etwas eigenartiges an sich.

Was ist da bloß schiefgelaufen?
 
Eben. Dafür hat die Griechisch-Zyprische Nationalgarde Moscheen und Dörfer bei Paphos/Baf, Larnaka und Limasol geplündert. Was soll man dazu noch mehr sagen ?


Bei den Moscheen aufpassen nicht das es die Türkische Armee war um einen Konflikt zu provozieren

[h=1]Turkey burned mosque during Cyprus conflict, general says[/h]ISTANBUL – Bloomberg | 9/24/2010 12:00:00 AM |
A retired Turkish general has said Turkish authorities burned a mosque on Cyprus to increase civil resistance against Greeks on the disputed island.
Retired Turkish Gen. Sabri Yirmibeşoğlu said Turkish authorities burned a mosque on Cyprus to increase civil resistance against Greeks on the disputed island, private channel Habertürk reported.
Speaking about military strategy during a Habertürk interview, the general said Turks burned a mosque to increase animosity toward Greeks on Cyprus, Habertürk said. He did not say when the mosque-burning occurred. Turkey intervened on the island in 1974 in response to an Athens-backed coup aimed at union with Greece.
Yirmibeşoğlu, who was in charge of civil resistance during the Cyprus war, said it was a rule of war to engage in acts of sabotage made to look as if they were carried out by the enemy.
Yirmibeşoğlu was later named secretary-general of Turkey’s National Security Council.


TURKEY - Turkey burned mosque during Cyprus conflict, general says
 
Bei den Moscheen aufpassen nicht das es die Türkische Armee war um einen Konflikt zu provozieren

Turkey burned mosque during Cyprus conflict, general says

ISTANBUL – Bloomberg | 9/24/2010 12:00:00 AM |
A retired Turkish general has said Turkish authorities burned a mosque on Cyprus to increase civil resistance against Greeks on the disputed island.
Retired Turkish Gen. Sabri Yirmibeşoğlu said Turkish authorities burned a mosque on Cyprus to increase civil resistance against Greeks on the disputed island, private channel Habertürk reported.
Speaking about military strategy during a Habertürk interview, the general said Turks burned a mosque to increase animosity toward Greeks on Cyprus, Habertürk said. He did not say when the mosque-burning occurred. Turkey intervened on the island in 1974 in response to an Athens-backed coup aimed at union with Greece.
Yirmibeşoğlu, who was in charge of civil resistance during the Cyprus war, said it was a rule of war to engage in acts of sabotage made to look as if they were carried out by the enemy.
Yirmibeşoğlu was later named secretary-general of Turkey’s National Security Council.


TURKEY - Turkey burned mosque during Cyprus conflict, general says



Das selbe wie im Pogrom 1955.
 
Weitere Quelle zu der Zerstörung der zyprischen Kulturgutes

Cyprus: Destruction Of Cultural Property



III. Destruction of Cultural Property and Illicit Trade of Stolen and Illegally Exported Artifacts

Various documents confirm that during the Turkish military invasion, and especially during the thirty-five years of occupation that have followed, a plethora of archaeological and religious sites have been damaged.[18]The destruction of historic monuments and the desecration of religious sites constitute issues of paramount importance for the people of Cyprus as a nation, because such monuments and religious sites represent and constitute part of Cyprus’ vast cultural and religious heritage. The Cyprus government and the Church of Cyprus have campaigned for years to disseminate information before various fora[19] on the destruction of their cultural property, and to repatriate lost or stolen artifacts taken from religious sites in the northern part of Cyprus. The partial lifting of the restrictions of movement between the two communities across the ceasefire line in 2003 heightened the awareness of the Greek-Cypriot community, who witnessed for the first time the magnitude and the extent of the destruction and desecration of religious and other historical monuments.
In 2008, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe issued Resolution 1628 on the Situation in Cyprus, in which it urged Turkish and Cypriot authorities, inter alia,to protect all religious monuments and permit restoration of such monuments where it is necessary.[20]
The United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO),[21] in implementing its exclusive mandate to protect cultural property, in 1984 provided the first official account of the destruction of cultural property. At that time, UNESCO issued a report on the implementation of the Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict,[22]noting that the distinctive emblem required by the Convention had been placed on the roofs and in front of important monuments, archaeological sites, museums and other institutions that are under the control of the government of Cyprus.[23] The report continued:
Unfortunately, in the area occupied by the Turkish army, museums and monuments have been pillaged or destroyed. The government [of Cyprus] has repeatedly applied to UNESCO and asked the mission of observers to report on the condition of the monuments. So far, this mission has met with the refusal of the Turkish ‘authorities.’[24]
The report referred to the area of Paphos, which was subject to aerial bombardment by Turkey in 1974 and was placed on the World Heritage List in 1980.[25] A subsequent UNESCO report adopted in 1989 described the situation in Cyprus in similar terms.[26]
The following data, made available by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cyprus on its website, illustrate the extent of the destruction and pillage of cultural property in the northern part of Cyprus:

 
Weitere Quelle zu der Zerstörung der zyprischen Kulturgutes

Cyprus: Destruction Of Cultural Property



III. Destruction of Cultural Property and Illicit Trade of Stolen and Illegally Exported Artifacts

Various documents confirm that during the Turkish military invasion, and especially during the thirty-five years of occupation that have followed, a plethora of archaeological and religious sites have been damaged.[18]The destruction of historic monuments and the desecration of religious sites constitute issues of paramount importance for the people of Cyprus as a nation, because such monuments and religious sites represent and constitute part of Cyprus’ vast cultural and religious heritage. The Cyprus government and the Church of Cyprus have campaigned for years to disseminate information before various fora[19] on the destruction of their cultural property, and to repatriate lost or stolen artifacts taken from religious sites in the northern part of Cyprus. The partial lifting of the restrictions of movement between the two communities across the ceasefire line in 2003 heightened the awareness of the Greek-Cypriot community, who witnessed for the first time the magnitude and the extent of the destruction and desecration of religious and other historical monuments.
In 2008, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe issued Resolution 1628 on the Situation in Cyprus, in which it urged Turkish and Cypriot authorities, inter alia,to protect all religious monuments and permit restoration of such monuments where it is necessary.[20]
The United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO),[21] in implementing its exclusive mandate to protect cultural property, in 1984 provided the first official account of the destruction of cultural property. At that time, UNESCO issued a report on the implementation of the Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict,[22]noting that the distinctive emblem required by the Convention had been placed on the roofs and in front of important monuments, archaeological sites, museums and other institutions that are under the control of the government of Cyprus.[23] The report continued:
Unfortunately, in the area occupied by the Turkish army, museums and monuments have been pillaged or destroyed. The government [of Cyprus] has repeatedly applied to UNESCO and asked the mission of observers to report on the condition of the monuments. So far, this mission has met with the refusal of the Turkish ‘authorities.’[24]
The report referred to the area of Paphos, which was subject to aerial bombardment by Turkey in 1974 and was placed on the World Heritage List in 1980.[25] A subsequent UNESCO report adopted in 1989 described the situation in Cyprus in similar terms.[26]
The following data, made available by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cyprus on its website, illustrate the extent of the destruction and pillage of cultural property in the northern part of Cyprus:


Alter ich bin mir fast sicher, daß Interpol mit hoher Priorität nach dir sucht.
 
Eine interessante pdf zum Thema: Der Verlust einer Zivilisation

http://www.publications.gov.cy/moi/pio/publications.nsf/0/C3E8DF9C2B8E4D96C22579CE003859ED/$file/THE%20LOSS%20%20GER13.pdf

Hoffe das es die Türkei irgendwann verstehen wird, das man keine Kulturgüter zerstören soll.
 

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