Honeysuckle threads its way through the lower branches of the orange tree on the edge of the patio.
Second day of Bayram celebrations. Think that banks and government offices remain closed tomorrow as well, Bayram having fallen on a Sunday this year.
No real holiday from world tension of course. The Republic of Cyprus (South) delighted to announce that schools in Greece will be celebrating EOKA Day on April 1. EOKA was the guerilla organisation that fought not only for Cypriot independence from Britain but for political union with Greece. To quote from my blog of March 2/23:
EOKA was a terrorist organisation active from the fifties to the seventies whose aim was political union with Greece, pitting it against the British, Turkish Cypriots, and many fellow Greek Cypriots. While many independence movements have involved violence, EOKA was not an independence movement and did mean death for Turkish Cypriots. Independence was granted by the British in 1960, and the government of the Republic later outlawed the organisation, which had been responsible for civilian deaths and involved with the assassination of the American ambassador.
The Americans may have forgiven or forgotten the indignities but Turks and Turkish Cypriots - many of whom were killed by EOKA - have not. Taking the celebration into the schools for the next generation seems unnecessarily provocative.
So it seemed rather refreshing to see headline in the TRNC’s Cyprus Mirror (North) reading ‘Erdoğan Vows Accountability for “Sabotaging” Economy’. Humility has never been his strong point and his unusual fiscal policies have seen the Turkish lira fall from seven to the euro three years ago to forty-one to the euro now. Making the Canadian dollar look like an investor’s dream. Takes only a few seconds though to realise that the accountability Erdoğan is vowing is not on his own behalf but a threat to the opposition. Sigh.
As journalist Robin Lustig put it the other day:
‘It was as long ago as 1996, nearly thirty years ago, that the then mayor of Istanbul, a certain Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, said this: “Democracy is like a tram. You ride it until you arrive at your destination, then you get off”. He stayed on that tram for a long time, but now he has jumped off. He has reached his destination.’