by Dore Gold
Anyone flipping through
 cable television channels with his or her remote control has 
undoubtedly come across programs about British and other retirees from 
Northern Europe seeking to escape the harsh climate where they live by 
venturing to one of the well-known vacation spots along the 
Mediterranean coast. The difficult problem that these buyers face is the
 soaring prices of properties over the last decade in places like 
Marbella, Spain, the French Riviera, or Italy's Amalfi Coast, which 
leads many to look for more economical alternatives. As a result, many 
European buyers after 2002 have been flocking to Northern Cyprus, where a
 villa with a swimming pool can be bought at discount prices. 
The main legal question
 that is not addressed with this new European property boom is the legal
 status of the area where these new homes are being built. It should be 
recalled that in 1974 the Turkish army invaded Cyprus, which had been an
 independent state since 1960 and took over 37 percent of the island. 
Tens of thousands of Greek Cypriots were expelled in this period in what
 they viewed was a deliberate policy of ethnic cleansing by the Turkish 
army. In the aftermath of the invasion, the U.N. Security Council 
adopted Resolution 353 which demanded "an immediate end to foreign 
military intervention" and called for "the withdrawal without delay from
 the Republic of Cyprus of foreign military personnel." 
The Turkish Cypriots 
declared their independence in 1983 by forming the "Turkish Republic of 
Northern Cyprus," an act that the U.N. condemned as "null and void." 
Over the years, an estimated 160,000 "settlers" who came from Turkey 
moved into Northern Cyprus. In many cases, properties that had been left
 behind by Greek Cypriot refugees were given by the Northern Cyprus 
administration to Turkish Cypriots and to the Turkish settlers, who sold
 them to European buyers. To date, some 5,000 British citizens have 
purchased homes in Northern Cyprus despite it being a clear-cut case of 
an "occupied territory." According to a BBC report, as many as 10,000 
foreigners have bought up former Greek Cypriot properties in Northern 
Cyprus. 
Is there any basis for comparing Northern Cyprus to the situation with the West Bank? 
A number of glaring 
differences stand out. First, Israel entered the West Bank in a war of 
self-defense in 1967 when it faced an Arab war coalition that was 
massing forces along its borders. In contrast, the circumstances of the 
Turkish invasion were very different. Turkey did not face imminent 
attack from Cyprus, but rather was concerned with intercommunal tensions
 in Cyprus. 
Second, there was no 
established sovereignty in the West Bank in 1967 that Israel violated; 
there was no Palestinian state while Jordan's claim to sovereignty was 
rejected by most of the international community except for Britain and 
Pakistan. Moreover, there were earlier Jewish rights under the British 
Mandate, which never expired. Looking at the Cypriot case, prior to the 
Turkish invasion in 1974, the Republic of Cyprus was the undisputed 
sovereign over the entire island, including the area of Northern Cyprus.
Finally, the 
resolutions adopted by the U.N. Security Council in the two conflicts 
were very different. In the aftermath of the Six-Day War, the U.N. 
Security Council adopted Resolution 242 which did not call for an 
Israeli withdrawal from all the territories it captured as a result of 
the conflict. The resolution suggested that the old armistice lines be 
replaced with secure and recognized borders. 
Yet in the case of 
Northern Cyprus, the U.N. did not qualify its demand for a Turkish 
withdrawal by allowing, for example, the Turkish military to remain in 
even part of the island. Looking at these different considerations, it 
appeared that the international community should have judged the dispute
 over Northern Cyprus far more severely than the way it viewed the 
dispute over the West Bank, where Israel had multiple rights that it 
could exercise if it decided to do so.
However, in practice, 
that was not the case. As usual, on Dec. 10, the European Union declared
 yet again that it was "deeply dismayed by and strongly opposes Israeli 
plans to expand settlements in the West Bank, including in east 
Jerusalem." Its statement made wild charges that Israeli construction in
 E1 "could also entail forced transfer of civilian population."
It finally added that 
"the European Union reiterates that settlements are illegal under 
international law and constitute an obstacle to peace." Ironically, 
while the EU releases harsh statements of this sort against Israel for 
any construction activity in West Bank settlements, it has nothing to 
say about tens of thousands of Turkish settlers that have moved into 
Northern Cyprus. 
Nor are European 
governments condemning their own citizens who are seeking to build 
beachfront villas with swimming pools in territory that is technically 
still under Turkish occupation. European governments have warned their 
citizens that former Greek residents of Northern Cyprus may initiate 
legal proceedings in European courts against those who take over their 
properties. But there is no objection being stated in principle against 
European citizens moving into these territories in order to build 
vacation homes.
How does international 
law apply in these situations? There is a long-standing dispute over 
whether Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, for the protection 
of civilians, should be understood narrowly as prohibiting an occupying 
power from forcibly transferring its population into an occupied 
territory (the traditional Israeli and U.S. view) or should be 
interpreted broadly so that it even prohibits an occupying power from 
letting its citizens voluntarily move into an occupied territory (the 
European and Arab view). 
But the European foreign 
ministries cannot have it both ways: they cannot condemn Israelis who 
build homes in the West Bank for violating international law, while they
 approve, in principle, or are at least silent about Turkish settlers 
and their European business partners who benefit from the lands Turkish 
Cypriots have taken over, as they develop what has been one of the 
hottest Mediterranean real estate markets for Europeans seeking a place 
in the sun.
Dore Gold
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=3170
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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