Bloody Christmas in Cyprus-Turkish Civilian Massacre By Greeks Forces
Documented massacres against Turkish Cypriots include the 1963 Bloody Christmas attacks,the 1974 Maratha–Santalaris–Aloda massacre, the Tochni killings, and mass graves in Taşkent, all verified by UN reports; Türkiye, as a legal guarantor,had to intervene.
Approximately 25,000 Turkish Cypriots from 104 villages, amounting to a quarter of the Turkish Cypriot population, fled their villages and were displaced into enclaves. Thousands of Turkish Cypriot houses left behind were ransacked or completely destroyed.
Accordingly, the Greek court characterised Türkiye's 1974 action not as an invasion, but as a lawful intervention.
Moreover, the Council of Europe, in its Resolution 573 of 29 July 1974, explicitly condemned the Greek coup and acknowledged that Türkiye's intervention was a legitimate right derived from Article IV of the 1960 Treaty of Guarantee:
Article 2:
Condemning the coup d’état carried out in Cyprus by officers owing allegiance to the Greek military dictatorship;
Article 3:
Regretting the failure of the attempt to reach a diplomatic settlement which led the Turkish Government to exercise its right of intervention in accordance with Article 4 of the Treaty of Guarantee of 1960.
Conclusion:
The Council of Europe condemned Greece and recognised the legal basis of Türkiye's intervention.
The Athens Court of Appeal, in its judgment of 21 March 1979 (Case No. 2658/79), explicitly stated that "the Turkish intervention in Cyprus was legal and the real responsibles were Greek officers."
1974 was not an "illegal invasion."
It was a legitimate intervention defined by international law, judicial rulings, and binding treaties.