The Pak Banker

Iranian dissident caught between rock, hard place

- -AFP

NICOSIA: An Iranian dissident who fled his country fearing arrest has fallen foul of politics and COVID-19 restrictio­ns in ethnically split Cyprus. Since midSeptemb­er, Omid Tootian has been living in a small tent in Cyprus's buffer zone, a United Nations-controlled slice of territory carved out after a war split Cyprus in 1974.

A musician critical of Teheran, Tootian left Iran for Turkey four years ago. Fearful for his safety in Turkey where he claimed other Iranian dissidents had disappeare­d, he traveled to northern Cyprus, a statelet recognized only by Ankara. From there, he planned to travel to its internatio­nally recognized Greek Cypriot south. That is where his plans stalled. "The police didn't let me in," Tootian, 45, told Reuters, saying officers on the Greek Cypriot side cited restrictio­ns because of COVID-19. "So I got stuck here in between."

'Here' is a slice of territory about 500 meters wide separating opposing sides in central Nicosia, Cyprus's ethnically split capital. The buffer zone, as it is known, fans out east to west, 116 miles (180 kms)long. Tootian has pitched his tent in the overgrown garden of a home abandoned during the war. Shutters with peeling paint hang off hinges on windows still stacked with sandbags.

A building next door housing peace groups has the only visible sign of activity in the area.

The area is named after the Ledra Palace, a hotel on the other side of the road where a British contingent of United Nations peacekeepe­rs stays. After 29 years of being sealed shut, it was the first crossing point opened to the two communitie­s in 2003.

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