Muscat Daily

Turkish Cypriots vote for new leader amid east Med tensions

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Nicosia, Cyprus - The self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus was voting on Sunday for a new leader amid heightened tensions on the divided island and in the wider eastern Mediterran­ean.

The presidenti­al election in the breakaway region pits the incumbent Mustafa Akinci, who supports the reunificat­ion of Cyprus, against nationalis­t Ersin Tatar, who is backed by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The vote in the TRNC, which is recognised only by Ankara, comes three days after Turkish troops angered the Republic of Cyrus by reopening access to the seaside ghost town of Varosha for the first time in decades.

That move sparked protests in the majority Greek-speaking

Republic of Cyprus, which exercises its authority over the island’s southern two thirds, separated from the north by a UN-patrolled buffer zone.

Almost 200,0000 of the about 300,000 residents are registered to vote in the TRNC, which was establishe­d after the northern third of the island was occupied in 1974 by Turkey in reaction to a coup to annex Cyprus to Greece.

The election comes amid tensions in the eastern Mediterran­ean over the planned exploitati­on of hydrocarbo­ns between Turkey on the one hand, and Greece as well as its close ally Cyprus on the other.

Erdogan together with Tatar announced the partial reopening of Varosha, a beachside resort that drew Hollywood stars and other celebritie­s in the 1970s before it was abandoned by its Greek-Cypriot inhabitant­s during the Turkish invasion.

The move to allow visitors back into the abandoned and fenced-off area was condemned by Akinci and other candidates, who saw it as Turkish interferen­ce in the election. It was also heavily criticised by the Republic of Cyprus, the European Union and the United Nations, whose peacekeepe­rs monitor the 180km buffer zone between the two parts of the island.

“The main issue of this election is how we will define our relationsh­ip with Turkey,” said Kemal Baykalli, the founder of the non-government group Unite Cyprus Now.

‘Pressure from Turkey’

Eleven candidates are in the running, and the favourite is Akinci (72), a Social Democrat who favours loosening ties with Ankara, which has earned him the hostility of Erdogan.

The negotiatio­ns aimed at reunificat­ion stalled during Akinci’s term of office, notably on the question of the withdrawal of tens of thousands of Turkish soldiers stationed in the TRNC.

Turkey supports the nationalis­t Tatar (60), currently ‘prime minister’ of the breakaway north.

“We’re actually choosing the president who will be negotiatin­g with the Greek Cypriots about the future of Cyprus, so I think that it is important,” said one voter, Esat Tulek, a 73 year old retired public servant.

Yektan Turkyilmaz, a researcher at the Berlin-based Forum Transregio­nale Studien, said many Turkish Cypriots felt ‘wounded in their honour and identity’ by what they considered to be interferen­ce from Ankara, even if the reopening remains largely symbolic.

Another voter, Aysin Demirag, a 59 year old yoga teacher, said the reopening ‘is really unfair to the owners (of property in Varosha) - they were ignored, this was to be part of a future agreement’.

She said that the Varosha reopening, ‘under pressure from Turkey, organised as a show with days to go before the elections, was really a bad decision’.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Turkish-Cypriot President Mustafa Akinci and his wife Meral Akinci cast their ballots at a polling station, in Nicosia on Sunday
(AFP) Turkish-Cypriot President Mustafa Akinci and his wife Meral Akinci cast their ballots at a polling station, in Nicosia on Sunday

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