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The Mystery of UNFICYP'S Major Macey MBE & Driver Platt's Disappearance in Cyprus By David Carter, with Former UNFICYP Staff Sergeant Robert Alftan of Finland's YKSP 1 Battalion That warm Sunday afternoon in June 1964, Major Edward Macey, a portly 46-year-old, and Driver Leonard Platt, 28, set off on their UN mission to negotiate the release of 32 Cypriot Turks taken hostage three weeks earlier by Cypriot Greek militia. Cyprus was a maelstrom of violence and racial hatred, but the two British soldiers had no reason to believe they faced any threat from either side in this communal civil war that was ripping the heart out of the so-called 'Island of Love' in 1964. |
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The 78-year-old blind Imam of Omorphita, killed in cold blood by Nicos Sampson's militia |
This
was all part of the Akritas Plan for ethnic cleansing - a phrase coined
much later - to rid Cyprus of the Turkish community, which shared power
with the Greeks. The operation was scheduled to last less than a week.
By launching simultaneous attacks of overwhelming strength against Turkish
towns and villages, Makarios was sure that it would be a complete success
before the international community could react and get involved.
The Christmas period was considered the ideal time to start as the world was preparing for the holiday and season of goodwill. |
Greek irregulars lead offensive
| Three
Militia groups opened the conflict. They were led by Minister of the Interior
Polycarpos Georghadjis, the 33 year-old who had been the commander of Eoka
in Nicosia before independence, Dr Vassos Lyssarides, Makarios's personal
physician, another Eoka activist, and Nicos Sampson, the 'Murder Mile'
killer of British service personnel.
Nancy Crawshaw, the veteran expert on Cyprus, told BBC listeners: 'The major offensive launched against the Turks in Nicosia was sanctioned by President Makarios and his cabinet, but he and certain ministers were taken aback by the excesses committed. 'Bands of former of former Eoka members and other irregulars, in groups of about a hundred - usually led by (Greek Cypriot) police - took part in the operation. Seven hundred hostages - including women and children - were seized in the northern suburbs and Turks were murdered in their homes |
Greek Cypriot Minister of the Interior Polycarpos Georghadjis |
Makarios believed - rightly - that as long as there were Turks in Cyprus, he would not be able fulfil his dream of enosis - the island's union with Greece - although he had agreed and signed all the treaties which allowed for independence in 1960.
On
4 September 1962, in an address to his supporters, he said: 'Unless this
small Turkish community - forming part of the Turkish race, which has been
the terrible enemy of Hellenism - is expelled from Cyprus, the duty of
the heroes of Eoka can never be considered terminated.'
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Sir Hugh Foot, the last British Governor of Cyprus (centre), signs the Independence documents, with the incoming President Archbishop Makarios (left) and Vice-President Dr Kutchuk (right). These treaties established the co-partnership 1960 Republic of Cyprus that granted power-sharing between Greek and Turkish Cypriots and prohibited enosis.These treaties precluded Cyprus specifically from joining Greece and ensured the smaller Turkish community positive rights in government and the civil service. Neither side was allowed to change the constitution without the approval of the other. |
Furthermore, Britain, Greece and Turkey were allowed under treaty obligations to intervene, collectively or individually, using force if necessary, in the event the island's stability was threatened.
Makarios asks Britain for help
| Throughout
the latter half of 1963, the Turkish Cypriots were aware that 'Blak Mak'
was planning something. Although they did not know exactly what his plans
were, they resurrected their TMT organisation, originally created in 1956
to counter Eoka.
The Akritas Plan began to unravel badly for the Makarios clique because the Turks, despite being outnumbered 30 to one and poorly armed, had effective command and control of the TMT and fought back hard, supported by 650 mainland Turkish soldiers in the Nicosia area. |
Turkish Cypriots man the barricades in Nicosia, the capital |
Turkish Cypriots cry for help from the international community |
Fearing
stronger retaliation from Turkey, following a low-level flight of her Sabre
jet fighters over the capital on Christmas Day, Makarios requested British
Forces become 'peace makers'.
Nicosia was a particular 'hotspot'. There the British drew a 'Green Line' on a map and decided the Turks would stay north and the Greeks south. |
Greek Cypriot militia soldier threatens British officer |
The London Daily Telegraph
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For the next two months British troops, at great risk to themselves, did their best to prevent the daily killings and hostage taking. They were often thwarted in their task by hostility from the Greek Cypriot irregulars. | ![]() |
| By
February the British found they could no longer trust Makarios and wondered
even if he were still in control of the worsening situation. When Greeks
were under threat, he immediately agreed ceasefire terms, but started attacks
elsewhere on 'soft' Turkish targets.
Now Makarios was insisting the government - exclusively his - was putting down a rebellion instigated by the Turks, although the world's press reported a very different story in its coverage and had no doubts who the guilty were as the massacres of defenceless Turkish men, women and children continued. |
'But, gentlemen, the problem is settling itself' -from the London Daily Mail |
UNFICYP contingents were drawn from a number of nations, including Canada, Ireland and Finland.
British troops don blue berets
|
Prime Minister and Robert Kennedy ![]() |
UNFICYP's
mandate was designed 'to prevent a recurrence of fighting, maintain law
and order and promote a return to normality'. The Force was not allowed
to militarily intervene when fighting broke out. Many former Blue Beret
soldiers to this day wish they could have done much more, because the Greek
National Guard provoking incidents and then trying to storm Turkish enclaves
and refugee camps with overwhelming force. UNFICYP personnel were often
pushed aside and disarmed by the Greeks, leaving the UN to protest to a
deaf Greek Cypriot leadership.
But the UK Government hesitated to take a firm stand against Makarios and chose instead to protest only through diplomatic channels about his regime's illegal activities that openly violated the treaties that allowed Cypriot independence and now no longer made the Republic of Cyprus government - as it stood - legitimate. Just days before Major Macey and Driver Platt vanished, Britain again demonstrated its timid approach after Makarios formed a uniformed army from the militia groups and ordered conscription for his new 'Greek Cypriot National Guard'. The British High Commissioner in Nicosia, on instructions from London, reminded the Makarios authorities, that: "Article 129 of the Constitution requires compulsory military service shall not be instituted except by common agreement of the President and Vice-President of the Republic and that article is a basic article in the terms of Article 182 and by Article II of the Treaty of Guarantee. The British Government, as a Guarantor Power, recognise and guarantee the state of affairs established by the Basic Articles of the Constitution" |
Makarios ignores diplomatic note
Archbishop Makarios welcomes more mainland Greek troops in 1964 to fight the Turkish Cypriots |
Under
the direction of Interior Minister Georghadjis, the Greek Cypriot National
Guard incorporated the mainland Greek forces in Cyprus. The new force,
armed with modern weapons imported from Communist countries, was placed
under the command of former Eoka leader George Grivas, now promoted to
general. Georghadjis appointed himself 'Minister of Defence', a post from
which the Turkish Cypriot minister Osman Orek had been removed at gunpoint
in December 1963.
'I was only made a minister because of my work in Eoka,' Georghadjis admitted in a rare press interview, published in The Guardian. 'I commanded the Nicosia area and then the Troodos.' |
Makarios inspects his Greek Cypriot Army. 'Minister of Defence' Georghadji follows behind him |
Greek and Turkish warnings
Vice President Dr Faisal Kutchuk |
None
of these events appeared to deter Major Macey, nick-named the 'Lone
Wolf'. He had a job to do and he intended to do it. A member of the Operations
Liaison Branch of UNFICYP HQ, he was under the command of Lieutenant General
A J Archer, the Chief of Operations Officer. Archer attached him to Vice
President Dr Kutchuk's office because he was fluent in both Turkish and
Greek, with longstanding experience of local politics. Another UN officer
performed a similar function at Makarios's headquarters.
Macey, perhaps more than Platt, was convinced that as a UN officer the Turks and the Greeks alike respected him for his even-handedness. The London Daily Sketch editorialised: 'Of all people who have done their level best to keep Turk and Greek apart in Cyprus, one man stands out. |
President Archbishop Makarios |
| 'See this, it's me being carried shoulder high by Greek villagers and soldiers when we liberated them during the Civil War,' he said. 'This is my passport. It was taken where I won my medals. No Greek Cypriot who sees this will harm me.' Orek replied: 'You have yet to be educated about these people. Do not confuse mainland Greeks with Greek Cypriots.' On 7 June 1964 - a Sunday - Major Macey and Driver Platt made one of their regular visits to the Turkish Cypriot village of Galatia as part of his regular UNFICYP liaison duties to discuss if the local people had any problems that he could help resolve. |
Osman Orek, the Turkish Cypriot Minister of Defence of the Republic whom Makarios's men removed from office on 23 December 1963 |
'On this occasion, it was about 12.45 p.m. I was resting at my home when I saw them enter our village. Major Macey was dressed in khaki shorts, long socks and shoes. His shirt was a long-sleeved woollen type, with the sleeves rolled up. United Nations badges were on his shoulders and his beret was blue, but, I remember, he was not wearing a blue scarf like other UN officers.
'He was carrying an automatic pistol in an open holster on his belt. (A 9 mm Browning automatic, registration number L43916, with a magazine of 13 rounds, in accordance with the Standard Operational Procedure laid down for the Force). 'The pistol was attached to a lanyard, which was around his shoulder. He was smoking a pipe.
'Driver Platt was wearing a khaki uniform, too, with blue beret and scarf. I am not sure whether he was wearing shorts or long trousers. (His personal weapon was a 7.62 mm LIAI rifle, registration number 643916. 'When I arrived at the Police Station, Major Macey was talking to Mr Halil, the village's assistant Mukhtar. I suggested that we have a cool drink and Major Macey and Platt then went in the Land Rover to the café. Mr Halil and I went in our car. We all had a cool drink and talked for about five minutes, When Major Macey went off for a walk by himself. Driver Platt remained at the café.
'I returned to the cafe about 2.45 p.m. Driver Platt was still there. Fifteen minutes later Major Macey joined us again. We had a short conversation and then Mr Halil, the Assistant Mukhtar, asked if they would drive him to Nicosia 'Major Macey declined, pointing out that to have a Turk in his vehicle would bring danger to them all as the Greeks saw him "a dangerous man".'
Master spy Macey?
'Our Cyprus police - not the Turks, because they are rebels and traitors - were able to seize the Englishman Keith Marley, a member of the RAF and of the British Forces in Cyprus, before he succeeded in his mission to arm the enemy. 'They found in his possession two mortars destined for the Turkish terrorists. Under interrogation Marley has admitted he has long been supplying weapons to the terrorists and confirmed an earlier report in Teleftea Ora, that the British Intelligence Service is directing and arming the Turkish Cypriots. 'Now Teleftea Ora can reveal Keith Marley is one of the Intelligence Service Englishmen under the command of Major Macey, the head of the Intelligence Service in Cyprus, whose pro-terrorist activities we have disclosed and whose photograph we publish today. Thus, according to absolutely confirmed information in our possessions. Major Macey, who also sent others of his men to various parts of the island, sent Keith Marley to the Mansoura area. 'Despite our warnings, Macey - who is responsible for the bloody incidents at Paphos and Malia and who has had daily meetings with the leaders of the Turkish terrorist organisation TMT - has been seen as recently as the day before yesterday circulating freely in Nicosia.'
Hostages taken
There are two versions of what took place to cause the Greek deaths, both recorded by UNFICYP after interrogations of those involved. Everyone agrees that at about 14.30 on 11 May, four Greeks, in civilian dress, arrived in their car and entered the walled city of Famagusta, a heavily guarded Turkish enclave, although UNFICYP was trying to keep the warring factions apart. Later three of the car's occupants were identified as officers of the Greek Army. The fourth was a Greek Cypriot policeman, whose father was Chief Superintendent Pantelides. The Turks said the car failed to stop at the city's entrance gate, defying orders from the Turkish Cypriot police. On their way out, they were stopped, but as soon as the passengers got out of their car, one of them drew a pistol and began shooting, seriously wounding a Turk. In the ensuing battle, three of the Greeks were killed and one wounded. The surviving Greek mainland officer claimed, however, that they stopped as soon as they were ordered, but immediately they left their car, the Turks opened fire from close range. He insisted they had no time to retaliate. He refused to tell UNFICYP why armed officers of the Greek army, carrying NATO travel documents and accompanied by a Greek Cypriot policeman, were there in the first place.
More importantly, forensic evidence proved the Greeks had fired their weapons. News of the incident spread fast and Greek militia units attacked Turkish villages near Famagusta in retaliation. They also took 32 Turks hostage. Dr Galo Plaza, the senior UN mediator, confronted Makarios and demanded the return of the Cypriot Turks. The Archbishop replied blandly he had no idea where they were or what had happened to them.
Makarios on the left of the Greek Prime Minister (centre) with Grivas on the right |
Three
weeks later Major Macey set out to find the answers. UNFICYP or British
Forces never saw him again.
Macey may or may not have known that only two days earlier - 5 June - President Johnson sent a strongly worded letter to the Turkish Prime Minister. Johnson told him to calm down and not go ahead with establishing a military bridgehead in the Karpas, which Turkey had been planning if Greek attacks did not stop. Was Macey in that specific area to check on the Greeks and their hostages or to see if the local Turks were preparing the ground for an invasion by their 'mother; country? |
Facts and rumours
'By
09.55 hours I had learned that first, Major Macey had not slept in his
room the previous night 7/8 June, second, that Dvr Platt had been found
to be missing from the bed check at 23.00 hours on the 7 June - although
this was unexceptional since he frequently kept late hours on duty - and
third, that the vehicle in which they travelled had not been returned to
the MT lines on the evening of the 7 June, nor had the vehicle keys been
placed in the MT office on the key board.' The facts were passed to UNFICYP's
Deputy Commander, but there was no immediate cause for concern amongst
the staff as Macey was known for 'doing his own thing'. For reasons known
only to him, he chose not to have a radio in his Land Rover.
| By
midday enquiries were taking place. A call to Eastern Sovereign Base Area
at Dhekelia was made to see if he had spent the night with his former unit.
He had not. The Quartermaster at RAF Nicosia, where Platt was quartered,
confirmed nobody had seen him since he left to pick up Macey for the drive
to Galatia. 'I phoned Mr Antoniou, the Deputy Commander of the (Greek)
Cyprus Police, and told him we had not seen Major Macey and Driver Platt
since the day before. I asked him to start a search, giving their vehicle's
registration number - 94 BP 21,' the QM said.
Close-up of the area where Macey and Platt met their fate. From Galatia, Platt is likely to have driven Macey south-westwards until they reached the main road for Famagusta. Ayios Theodoros and then Gastria would have been on their left. Further south are Monarga and Trikomo after which comes the fishing village of Boghaz and Famagusta's old walled city, a Turkish Cypriot stronghold. In the Famagusta area, 1 Battalion 40 Irish Regiment sent out seven patrols to find the missing men. A helicopter was deployed to fly the route they have taken and the UN's Australian Police Unit (AUSPOL) joined Greek Cypriot police to search the area around Trikomo, the birthplace of General Grivas. |
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At nightfall, the search was called off until dawn the next day. There was, however, ominous information: a Major Webster of the RAOC Ordnance Depot, told UNFICYP that Lance Corporal Hunt of the Vehicle Sub Depot, who lived in married quarters at 11 Viotia Street, Famagusta, reported on 5 June that his landlord, Nicos Lotos, warned him Eoka planned to murder Macey the next time he was spotted An UNFICYP log notes: '1 Scout and 1 Auster have searched Panhandle east of line joining Boghaz and mountain range. Area south-east of this line heavily scrub-covered and riddled with caves, particularly along coast line, Further in land, many caves and very deep wells.' The log continues: 'Plans made for tomorrow with AUSPOL and 4 Bat Irish Rangers to continue search. Am going to Famgusta Greek Cypriot police station to make inquiries re: anonymous telephone call made yesterday (7 June) to local gendarmerie HQ about accident to UN vehicle nr Boghaz… Confirmed 7 June, large Greek National Guard preparing defences in Valia forest area. Ayios Theodorus known trouble spot. Unconfirmed: A medical orderly of 1 Bat Irish remembered today that he was told Sunday by old man about soldier (UN?) shot that day.'
International press coverage
Toronto Daily Star |
News correspondents based in Nicosia were soon tracking the story and their reports made the front-pages of UK newspapers, prompting Greek Cypriot Interior Minister Georghadjis cynically to tell UNFICYP he was giving top priority to finding the two soldiers. The UN's General Gyani was not convinced. He replied: 'It is inconceivable that two members of the United Nations Force were abducted, probably on a public road and certainly in broad daylight, without the local population and authorities knowing something about it. It can only be concluded that extremist elements known to the (Greek) Cyprus Government have, as in the past, been responsible for another case of abduction.' |
London Daily Express
![]() Even before Macey and Platt disappeared, tension had been running high between the Greek Cypriot irregular forces and the British in Cyprus. In part this had been caused by an incident involving British nurses and an 80-year-old woman who were stopped and indecently searched at a road-block by Greek Cypriot ‘soldiers’. Major-General Bishop, the British High Commissioner had protested to the Makarios administration that this was a breach of the UN Charter on Human Rights. Five days later, on 5 June, off-duty British troops and their wives were confined to their camps and homes. According to Dr H D Purcell, an authority on Cyprus, ‘the Greek-Cypriote police now went through the usual charade of 'searching' for the two soldiers, but since neither they nor the jeep (sic) were ever found it is permissible to record the persistent rumour that they were walled up alive and left to starve.’ The British High Commission now offered a £2,000 reward for information leading to their discovery. The streets of Cyprus were plastered with posters carrying their photographs. We do not know if anybody came forward. |
|
Furious officers
These are questions which the Archbishop could answer, but he has not even responded to any requests concerning the disappearance of Major Macey. 'As long as this Archbishop is with his actions defending the terrorists responsible, I am not attending any occasion, celebration or party where he is present. 'Gentlemen, this is not a mutiny. This is not an action against the British High Commission. This is my way of expressing my opinion about the Greek Cypriot police and its president.'
London Sunday Express correspondent Derek Lambert reported the dinner party: 'Junior R.A.F. officers, angry that the Archbishop should be invited while a search is going on for Major Macey, spent their evening in a makeshift mess a few hundred yards away… Archbishop Makarios drank orange squash and talked to his fellow guests - but he did not make a speech. It is thought he intended to do so, but changed his mind because of Greek Cypriot press criticism of his decision to attend the reception.'
Army report
| A
British Army Board of Inquiry, comprising Major P Gardiner (President)
and Members Captain C Boardman and 2nd Lieutenant N H Godfrey examined
everything as well as the backgrounds of the two missing men.
An only child, Edward Frankish Lewis Macey was born 3 January 1918 at 234 Euston Road, St Pancras, London. His parents were hotel owners and his father was also a professional ventriloquist and conjuror who appeared on the London stage. Young Edward appears not to have had many friends and became known as 'a lone wolf'. From his father he learned many tricks to amuse his elder relatives, because they recalled he could bend spoons, throw his voice and, more usefully, read lips. Later he became proficient in seven languages. At some point the relationship between his parents and himself broke down and he joined the Army as a 'Boy Soldier'. |
London Daily Mirror |
Major Macey RAOC |
During
WW2, Macey became an officer. His medals show he was a very effective professional,
who is Mentioned in Despatches and awarded the 1939-45 Star, the Africa
Star, the Italy Star, the Defence and the General War Medal for 1939-45,
with Oak Leaf and bar. The Greek Government presented him another two medals
for bravery at the end of the civil war in Greece.
Macey had been Major General St J C Hooley's British Liaison Officer between 1947 and 1950 at the Greek Corps HQ in Salonika, where he was held in very high regard by the General Staff, who resisted any moves to transfer him elsewhere. In 1956 Macey was promoted to Major. Shortly afterwards, he was posted to Malaya, where a State of Emergency had been declared to deal with the Communist insurgency. In recognition of his distinguished service there, he was made an MBE (Military Division). |
Driver Platt RASC |
Platt was a more typical British soldier who worked hard and played hard, often finding himself in difficulty with the Military Police. Only a week earlier, MPs caught him in Nicosia's red light area, which was out of bounds to service personnel. Major Macey, however, interceded on his behalf because he valued Platt's skills and did not want him replaced by someone not familiar with the work involved. The charges were dropped. Married with a daughter, Platt came from an Oxfordshire farming family. When he disappeared, he had only two months left to serve in Cyprus. At the Inquiry Major Gardiner likened Macey's missions to that of a newspaper correspondent in search of a story, allowed to exercise his personal initiative.
Red light arrest
After hearing all the available evidence, Major Gardiner summed up that Macey and Platt's disappearance 'was caused by foul play at the hand of the extremist elements, probably from the Greek Cypriot population.' 'This opinion,' he said, was 'based on the following facts:
UN soldiers defend themselves by firing warning shots from their Ferret |
On 7 July, UNFICYP Deputy Commander, Major General R M P Carver issued a confidential memo: 'I consider Major Macey and Drv Platt disappeared while on duty. I further consider that there is no evidence to suggest that there was any negligence in connection with their disappearance. I agree that the missing Ministry of Defence property be written off' |
'No comment'
"Ah, hello, Angel of Death! I've administered the Last Rites and now you can finish him off" - London Sunday Express |
The
Greek Cypriot Police were given the findings of the British Army and the
UN Civil Police. The media demanded a response. Mr Antoniou, the Deputy
Commander, agreed a press conference. His first words were: 'I will not
answer the queries in the report of 20.10.1964 handed to me by the UN Civil
Police. I have accordingly advised the Director-General of the Ministry
of the Interior. No additional information will be forthcoming from the
Cyprus Police to assist with the investigation.' A British journalist suggested
there was evidence in UN hands implicating two Greek Cypriot brothers -
the Polycarpou's - and both were Ministry of the Interior Special Constables,
operating in the area where the two Britons disappeared.
'No comment,' replied Antoniou sternly. |
| 'Well,
tell us about the well that was excavated - the well at Ayios Iannos near
Gastria and why was it filled up?' another reporter shouted. 'The bodies
of Macey and Platt were put in the well, weren't they?'
'No comment,' said Anotoniou. 'Next question.' 'Weren't the bodies recovered by your police in the middle of June, found under nine feet of soil?' 'Where were the Polycarpou brothers on 7 June?' |
A Greek Cypriot armoured car on patrol in the Panhandle area where Macey and Platt were thought to be buried. Note the enosis slogans painted by the crew. |
Missing, but dead?
In August 1967 a Ministry of Defence memo from one senior civil servant to another states: 'After three years, since 1964 to this day, we are still little nearer knowing how Macey and Platt were killed or where they're buried. It sticks in my gullet that the Cyprus Assistant Deputy of Police Security can simply decline to answer questions put by the U.N. Police.'
The memo quotes British High Commissioner Empson's opinion that nothing will be gained by further pressure on the (Greek) Cypriot authorities… All avenues of enquiry have been exhausted without the fate of the two missing persons being known… There is nothing to suggest they are still alive. They are obviously dead, the trail is cold (my italics, so why does UK MoD still insist they are 'missing'?) Our own investigations and the reward we offered produced nothing very conclusive.'
But the journalist who asked Antoniou the question about excavations of a well at Ayios Iannos, Gastria, claimed at the time that a local policeman had visited the scene twice and that a doctor was in attendance while the digging was taking place. The policeman said the Greek Cypriot authorities recovered the bodies in secret after which the well was filled with 24 feet of earth. He claimed all this took place on or around 20 June 1964. This information, it appears, was not followed up or if it was, then hidden away not only by the Greeks, but also by UNFICYP and the British High Commission.
Clues ignored
Staff Sergeant Robert Alftan (extreme left) of UNFICYP's Finnish contingent with two NCOs (Sherwood Foresters) in Omorphita on the day FINCON took charge from the British. |
Robert
Alftan, today a playwright in his native Finland, has taken a very personal
interest in the case because he was a staff sergeant with his country's
1 YKSP Battalion, part of UNFICYP when Macey and Platt vanished. He considers
Britain has dishonoured their memory and badly hurt their relatives by
concealing the truth. During the past decade he has made it his cause to
find out what he can, searching UN, UK archives and even those in Finland's
defence departments. He would like the soldiers' remains found and returned
to Britain for burial.
Recently Alftan found a UN Finnish Battalion report dated 22 November 1972 in the Finnish War Archives. It is marked 'No 38 /Ops (Operations Office)/D Situation report 41/72.' It runs to four pages and has no English translation. According to Colonel Makipaa these weekly reports were based on comment in Greek and Turkish media and UNFICYP observations. |
| In
part the document states: 'the local media is reporting the discovery (by
the Greek Cypriot authorities) of two human skeletons on the beach near
Ayios Theodoros. The Turks claim these are the remains of British Major
Edward Macey and his Driver Private Leonard Platt, who disappeared in June
1964, while investigating the fate of 32 Turks who disappeared at about
that time in the Famagusta area. Turkish reporters insist the Greeks killed
the Britons and the Turks.'
On 20 July 1974 Turkey invaded Cyprus after a coup that replaced Makarios as president with Nicos Sampson. Turkish Cypriots feared that this time the Akritas Plan would succeed. Turkey justified its actions under the 1959 Treaty of Guarantee. The Island was effectively partitioned. |
The 1964 Finnish UN contingent rides out from Nicosia for the Famagusta area. Again these reports were not followed up. |
An UNFICYP soldier takes a Greek Cypriot woman, scared from Turkish attack, back to her home in Ayios Theodoros village |
Today
the village of Ayios Theodoros is under the jurisdiction of the Turkish
Republic of Northern Cyprus whose administration is absorbed by other matters.
Nobody remembers where exactly the bodies went. It is presumed the Greeks
took them to… who knows where?
Case closed It is probable the UK Government has the full story. Clearly the Greek Cypriot authorities thought Macey was a Turkish agent and may have mounted a deliberate counter-intelligence operation to have him killed. If that is the case, then it explains why they refused to identify those responsible and press charges. |
Given Macey's background, it is more than likely he worked in some capacity for British Intelligence, despite wearing a UN blue beret. As the UK Government did not exercise its treaty obligations in 1963 and by default gave respectability and legitimacy to the illegal exclusively Greek Cypriot regime, Anglo-Greek relations could be soured - and British Sovereign Bases come under threat from Eoka terrorists again - by opening old wounds, especially 'given the long time that has elapsed… the High Commissioner considers it undesirable to make any further demarche when there is nothing to suggest that it could be productive'.
Meanwhile Macey and Platt's relatives are left for political reasons unable to secure 'closure' for their losses. John Macey says: 'Several cousins have banded together to try to unravel Major Ted's story. Our only aim is to fill gaps in our family history. We have no political opinions on the conflict in Cyprus and apportion no blame to either side. We just want to give Ted the respect he deserves…'
© 2005 David Carter
The content of this article is based on published material, including:
THE
NATIONAL ARCHIVES, Kew
(Documents:
FCO 27/162 Disappearance of Major Macey and Driver Platt in 1964;
WO
383/Board of Inquiry: /United Nations Forces in Cyprus, disappearance of
Major Macey and Driver Platt.
US STATE DEPT ARCHIVES
THE FINNISH WAR ARCHIVES (Tilannekatsaus: 41/72. Period: 11. - 17.11.1972)
THE
CYPRUS TAPES by David Matthews (Downlow 2000)
LEGACY
OF STRIFE by Charles Foley (Penguin Books 1964.)
THE
GENOCIDE FILES by Harry Scott Gibbons (Bravos 1997)
John Macey's website about his missing relative is found at:
BSW would like to hear from anyone who has information that could throw light on or resolve the mystery of these two British soldiers, in particular we would like the memories of any of Driver Platt's RASC friends.
©
2003 David Carter
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rights reserved.
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