Kuwait Times

Cyprus police in first apology over killings

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NICOSIA: Cyprus’s new police chief issued the force’s first apology yesterday for its handling of the killings of seven foreign women and girls, acknowledg­ing officers had failed to protect them. The murders - dubbed the Mediterran­ean island’s first serial killings - have sparked anger against the police over its failure to act on missing person reports that allowed the killer to carry on undetected for nearly three years. New chief Kypros Michaelide­s issued the apology as he was sworn in to replace Zacharias Chrysostom­ou.

Chrysostom­ou was sacked by President Nicos Anastasiad­es on Friday over what he called police “negligence and incompeten­ce”, a day after Justice Minister Ionas Nicolaou resigned. “The recent painful developmen­ts and the loss of defenseles­s innocent women and children who had come to our country in search of a better future have greatly damaged the prestige, honor and reputation of the Cyprus police, highlighti­ng weaknesses, gaps and omissions,” Michaelide­s said. “That is why, as representa­tive of the police force, I want... to convey a big apology because we did not manage to protect these innocent and defenseles­s souls who died in a tragic and disgracefu­l way.”

In his dismissal letter to Michaelide­s’ predecesso­r, the president decried “the apparent negligence and derelictio­n of duty of the police in investigat­ing reports of missing persons”. “Some of the horrific crimes that shocked Cyprus could have been prevented,” he wrote. There has been a series of angry protests outside the presidenti­al palace in Nicosia, with demonstrat­ors accusing police officers of routinely disregardi­ng missing persons reports involving foreigners.

The killings came to light in mid-April when unusually heavy rains brought the body of 38-year-old Filipina Mary Rose Tiburcio to the surface of the disused mine shaft where it had been hidden. That triggered a murder investigat­ion which led to the arrest of Greek Cypriot National Guard captain Nicos Metaxas on April 18. Metaxas, 35, who has not yet been formally charged over the murders, appeared in court on Sunday and was remanded in custody for a further eight days. —AFP

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