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Greece to hand 'Cyprus File' to Cypriot parliament on July 14

Greece will hand Cyprus on Friday a long-awaited file that contains documents collected by an investigative committee set up by the Greek parliament to examine the events before and during the Greek coup of July 15, 1974 which led to the Turkish invasion of the island.

The historic decision received the overwhelming support of Greek lawmakers during a vote on Tuesday. Parliament President Nikos Voutsis will travel to Cyprus on July 14 for the handover ceremony. The documents, included in the so-called "Cyprus File", will only be used for parliamentary, scientific or historical purposes.
The committee to examine the events that led to the junta-led coup in Cyprus was set up in 1986 following a proposal by PASOK to "investigate the conditions under which the treacherous and criminal coup against the independence of the Cypriot Republic was planned and executed in Greece and Cyprus". 
A large number of the meetings were devoted to procedural issues, while the rest focused on the examination of 86 witnesses. After 154 meetings, the committee delivered its findings in October 1988. The minutes of the meetings cover 20,798 pages, while, in addition to the minutes, the archives drawn up by the committee include dossiers of documents provided by the ministries of Foreign Affairs, Defence and Justice.
"I welcome the decision of the Greek parliament to give access to the Cypriot parliament to the 'Cyprus Fil' archive, the documents of which were compiled by the Greek parliament from 1986 to 1988, during the investigation into the'Cyprus File'," Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said earlier in a speech. 
"This decision constitutes an unfulfilled debt of the Greek state towards the Cypriot people, a minimum tribute and a historical vindication to all those who fought, resisted and were sacrificed during the coup against Makarios and the invasion and occupation of part of Cyprus by the 'Operation Attila'," he added.  
The two countries signed a cooperation protocol and an annex granting the Cypriot parliament access to the material which it had been requesting for many years.
Voutsis said documents labeled "secret" or "top secret" which were given to the investigative committee will not be handed over to Cyprus now, but will remain in Greece until they are not affected by "legal or other" considerations. 
On Friday, the Cypriot parliament will discuss compiling a version of the file which could be available to the wider public as an "invaluable historical source", he said. 

 
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