Family members watch as a soldier holding a photograph of...

Family members watch as a soldier holding a photograph of a Greek soldier whose remains were recently identified leads an honor guard at a funeral service at Ayios Panteleimonas Orthodox Church in the Cypriot capital Nicosia, Thursday, May 30, 2024. The service was held for 15 recently identified Greek soldiers who died in Cyprus fighting against invading Turkish troops nearly half a century ago. Credit: AP/Philippos Christou

NICOSIA, Cyprus — The remains of recently identified Greek soldiers who fought in Cyprus against invading Turkish troops nearly a half-century ago were returned to their families on Thursday.

Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides attended a funeral service in the capital, Nicosia, for the 15 Greek soldiers before their remains were contained in Greek flag-draped coffins.

Christodoulides said it was the least the state can do to honor and pay respect to the memory of those who died.

Eight of the 15 soldiers will be reinterred back in Greece. The families of another six opted to have their remains reinterred at a mass grave in the Cypriot capital that stands as the country’s prime monument for the war. No family members have been located for one of the soldiers, according to the state broadcaster.

Turkey invaded in July 1974, a week after supporters of union with Greece mounted a coup backed by the Greek junta then ruling the country.

The invasion resulted in Cyprus’ ethnic cleave, with Turkish Cypriots later declaring independence that’s only recognized by Turkey, which still maintains more than 35,000 troops in the breakaway north.

Of the 2,002 people who disappeared in 1974 and the preceding decade amid ethnic violence, the remains of 1,033 have been identified and returned to their families since U.N.-led search efforts began in earnest in 2006.

A procession of soldiers holding the small Cypriot and Greek...

A procession of soldiers holding the small Cypriot and Greek flag-draped coffins of Greek soldiers whose remains were recently identified, passes the entrance of Ayios Panteleimonas Orthodox Church in the Cypriot capital Nicosia Thursday, May 30, 2024. The service was held for 15 recently identified Greek soldiers who were killed in Cyprus fighting against invading Turkish troops nearly half a century ago. Credit: AP/Philippos Christou

U.N. officials said this marks the second-best success rate in the world, after the former Yugoslavia.

A total of 769 Greek Cypriots and 200 Turkish Cypriots are still listed as missing and officials say the passage of time poses a huge challenge.

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