The Jerusalem Post

UN in new bid to resolve Cyprus conflict

- • By MICHELE KAMBAS

NICOSIA (Reuters) – Rival Cypriot leaders meet in the Swiss Alps this week in a make or break summit to find a peace deal ending decades of division for the partitione­d island. The omens are not good.

The United Nations has called estranged Greek and Turkish Cypriot sides to open-ended talks in the Alpine resort of Crans-Montana on June 28.

Their goal is a peace deal uniting Cyprus under a federal umbrella and which could also define the future of Europe’s relations with Turkey, a key player in the conflict.

Two issues stand out: Turkish Cypriot demands for a rotating presidency, and Greek Cypriot demands that Turkey pull all its troops off the island, and renounce its interventi­on rights.

Publicly, neither side is willing to budge. Greek Cypriots, in a further complicati­on, have issued an advisory to drill for natural gas in mid-July, plans vehemently opposed by Turkey which says the island nation has no jurisdicti­on

“My expectatio­ns are rather low,” said Hubert Faustmann, professor of History and Politics at the University of Nicosia.

Divided in a Turkish invasion in 1974 triggered by an abortive coup by seekers of union with Greece, mediators say the two sides have come closer than they ever had to a deal, but the hard chapters have been left until last.

Diplomats hope leaders Nicos Anastasiad­es and Mustafa Akinci can strike a deal with the backing of Greece, Britain and Turkey. Those three countries are guarantor powers of Cyprus under a treaty that granted the former colony independen­ce in 1960.

Greece and the Greek Cypriots want the guarantor system dismantled. The system allows any of the three countries to intervene to restore constituti­onal order.

Turkey and Turkish Cypriots want the guarantor system, or some vestige of it, to remain in place. But if there is a compromise on that, everything else should fall into place.

“It will all depend on the security chapter... If they agree it will be a success, a breakthrou­gh. If it doesn’t it will be a failure,” Faustmann said.

On the eve of the summit, both sides have stood their ground. A Turkish Cypriot official engaged in talks told Reuters that sharing a rotating presidency was a sine qua non, or non-negotiable, for their side.

Christofor­os Fokaides, the Greek Cypriot defense minister, reiterated the position of his side on Sunday.

Any deal, he said, must allow peaceful coexistenc­e on the island “without occupation troops, and the anachronis­m of guarantees.” Turkey has some 30,000 troops in northern Cyprus, a breakaway Turkish Cypriot state. Greeks want them gone.

Stars have been on alignment over Cyprus before, only to be blown spectacula­rly apart.

Any deal must pass separate simultaneo­us referendum­s in both communitie­s. A previous endeavor by the UN in 2004 flopped when Greek Cypriots rejected the reunificat­ion blueprint.

“There have been 50 years of negotiatio­ns. We have to make up our minds,” said the Turkish Cypriot official involved in negotiatio­ns.

 ??  ?? A MAN stands in front of a gate in the UN-controlled buffer zone in Nicosia yesterday. (Yiannis Kourtoglou/ Reuters)
A MAN stands in front of a gate in the UN-controlled buffer zone in Nicosia yesterday. (Yiannis Kourtoglou/ Reuters)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel