While Makarios is a controversial figure and disliked by many even here,Turks weren't "forced out" of partnership,they left on their own. Because they couldn't accept the fact that as a minority,they would have less power under the new proposed amendments by Makarios.
You forgot to mention that there was already intercommunal violence brewing and the Turkish Cypriots retreated to their enclaves,heavily fortified them and kept receiving more and more weapons.
You also forgot to mention TMT.
You also skipped mentioning this:
Between 8–9 August 1964 the Turkish Air Force was given free rein to attack multiple targets within Tillyria, including a number of Greek Cypriot villages. As such heavy bombing caused also significant casualties among the civilian population.
Cypriot civilian casualties were reported as a result of heavy air attacks against several populated locations, including Kato Pyrgos dropping incendiary napalm bombs.
Turkish planes also attacked sites controlled by the Cypriot National Guard, killing civilians and a number of military personnel and destroying a Marmon Herrington Mk-IVF armoured car.
No,man. This isn't ethnic cleansing. This is:
General Mahmut Şevket Paşa (1856-1913), the Ottoman Commander-in-Chief, tells Orthodox Patriarch Ioakeim III (1834-1912), Greek Patriarch of Constantinople, in June 1909:
"We will cut off your heads, we will make you all disappear. Either we will survive or you."
According to an Austro-Hungarian agent, on 31 January 1917
Talaat Bey (1874-1921), the Minister of the Interior, declared:
"... I see that time has come for Turkey to have it out with the Greeks the way it had it out with the Armenians in 1915."
On 26 November 1916
Rafet Bey (or Paşa) informs Dr. Ernst von Kwiatkowski, the Austro-Hungarian consul in Samsoun:
"We must at last do with the Greeks as we did with the Armenians..."4
Two days later, 28 November 1916,
Rafet Bey informed Consul Kwiatkowski:
"We must now finish with the Greeks. I sent today battalions to the outskirts to kill every Greek they pass on the road."
Damad Ferid Paşa (1853-1923), the Ottoman Turkish Grand Vizier, described Turkey's policy of extermination against the Christians in June 1919 at the Paris Peace Conference as crimes:
"... such as to make the conscience of mankind shudder with horror for ever."