Book reveals fate of EOKA guerrilla fighters at the hands of the army during the dying days of empire on the Mediterranean island

At least 14 Cypriots were tortured then murdered by UK forces during an armed uprising in the late 1950s, according to newly unearthed evidence that raises fresh questions over another shocking chapter of Britain’s colonial history.

Testimony from British veterans and Cypriot rebel fighters, along with postmortem and morgue records, as well as previously undisclosed material from Cypriot archives, suggest that the victims died after being interrogated by UK officers. The dead, all men aged between 17 and 37, were arrested on suspicion of being part of the National Organisation of Cypriot Fighters, a paramilitary organisation known as EOKA, which orchestrated a guerrilla campaign to overthrow British control in Cyprus.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

UK jobseekers are offered six months of free broadband

Joint TalkTalk and government scheme to tackle digital exclusion gives no-contract uncapped…

How do you describe the view to someone who can’t see? I couldn’t even do justice to a canal towpath | Adrian Chiles

A day with some blind and partially sighted walkers has shown me…

Martin Rowson on Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget – cartoon

Continue reading…

World Rugby to introduce new guidelines to reduce contact training

Full contact training to be restricted to 15 minutes per week Guidelines…