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[DOCID: f:h2707ih.txt]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 2707
To restrict United States assistance of any kind to Turkey until Turkey
uses its influence with the Turkish Cypriot leadership to achieve a
settlement on Cyprus based on United Nations Security Council
resolutions.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
August 1, 2001
Mr. Payne introduced the following bill; which was referred to the
Committee on International Relations
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To restrict United States assistance of any kind to Turkey until Turkey
uses its influence with the Turkish Cypriot leadership to achieve a
settlement on Cyprus based on United Nations Security Council
resolutions.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. FINDINGS.
Congress finds the following:
(1) In 1974 Turkey illegally invaded Cyprus and
subsequently occupied over a third of the island.
(2) 2001 marks twenty-seven years of continued illegal
Turkish military occupation of Cyprus despite universal
international condemnation.
(3) The Turkish military has obstructed efforts to reach a
just and lasting resolution of the division of the island and
the massive uprooting and ethnic cleansing of Greek Cypriots
caused by the 1974 Turkish invasion.
(4) Turkey, in a May 10, 2001 judgment of the European
Court of Human Rights, was found responsible for massive
violations of human rights as a result of the continuing
occupation by Turkey of the northern part of Cyprus.
(5) Turkey's illegal invasion in 1974 violated the United
Nations Charter, the NATO Treaty, and customary international
law.
(6) Talks have been held under United Nations auspices to
reach a settlement based on ``a state of Cyprus with a single
sovereignty and international personality and a single
citizenship in a bizonal, bicommunal federation'' and that such
a settlement has been unanimously adopted by the international
community but is rejected by Turkey and the Turkish Cypriot
leader, Mr. Rauf Denktash.
(7) Successive rounds of proximity talks supported by the
G-8, the United Nations Security Council and the European Union
under United Nations auspices have made little progress, and
efforts to hold substantive discussions in 2001 are being
thwarted by new unproductive and unacceptable ``recognition''
demands by Mr. Denktash, supported by Turkey.
(8) The Cyprus Government has actively engaged in the
search for a settlement, as evidenced by the constructive
participation by Cyprus in United Nations-sponsored proximity
talks.
(9) Turkey has had several financial crises over the past
decades, including two within the past six months.
(10) At present, Turkey contributes approximately
$350,000,000 annually in direct economic support to the illegal
regime in the occupied area of Cyprus and several hundred
million dollars for support of its occupation troops and
settlers.
(11) The continuing unresolved Cyprus issue prevents normal
relations between NATO allies, Greece and Turkey.
(12) Tension between Greece and Turkey contributes to
instability in Southeast Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean.
(13) The United States has an important stake in fostering
good relations between two NATO allies, Greece and Turkey.
SEC. 2. RESTRICTION ON ASSISTANCE.
United States assistance of any kind shall not be provided to
Turkey until Turkey uses its influence with the Turkish Cypriot
leadership to achieve a settlement on Cyprus that calls for the
following:
(1) A resumption of the proximity talks within the agreed
procedure and framework and based on good faith negotiations.
(2) A solution set forth in United Nations resolutions,
based on ``a state of Cyprus with a single sovereignty and
international personality and a single citizenship in a
bizonal, bicommunal federation'' embodying the fundamental
constitutional and democratic principles common in Western
democracies, compatible with the Human Rights Convention and
Protocols, the European Acquis Communautaire and international
law.
(3) The immediate demilitarization of Cyprus.
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