Gulf News

A deal on Cyprus can be reached

Nato, EU and the UN can all participat­e in making sure all on the divided island are treated equally

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t is almost 44 years since the Mediterran­ean island of Cyprus was divided, following an invasion by Turkish military forces, dividing the nation into Cypriot and Turkish enclaves separated by a United Nations force of observers. Now, reunificat­ion of the nation seems tantalisin­gly close, with Ankara’s demand for the permanent stationing of Turkish forces on the island as a final hurdle.

For the past three months, a series of negotiatio­ns in Geneva and brokered by the United Nations have had leaders from both sides of the island divide agree to general terms for a future confederat­ion structure, resolve financial issues and come to terms over the thorny issue of property rights and land transfers. Talks were suspended for a week on Thursday. The suspension followed the participat­ion of the foreign ministers from Greece and Turkey, and of Boris Johnson, the United Kingdom’s Foreign Secretary. Britain has a place at the table as the former colonial power there and it still maintains military bases on the Greek-Cypriot side.

The new UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, was also at the talks, and should a permanent deal on the intractabl­e Cypriot division be reached, it will provide him with a significan­t coup despite only taking office on January 1.

The progress that has been made thus far needs to prevail and the impetus in reunificat­ion must be maintained. Ankara, however, is insisting that its forces have a permanent base on the northern portion of the island. Having landed its paratroope­rs there in 1974 to precipitat­e the division, the prospect now of having Turkish forces there permanentl­y is difficult for Greek-Cypriots to envision.

Ankara says the force is needed to ensure the long-term protection of the Turkish minority.

The demand, however, seems excessive, in that both Turkish and Greek-Cypriots believe that reunificat­ion can be achieved and that enough time has passed to heal old divisions.

The way forward seems to be for a third-party broker to provide security and protection assurances. Britain has offered to cut the size of its bases there. The European Union — of which Cyprus is a member and Turkey is aspiring to join the bloc as quickly as possible — should be able to provide a way forward. The UN already has observers on the island. And with both Greece and Turkey as long-standing members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on, the Brussels-based alliance may also provide a way forward. Simply put, a Cyprus deal can be reached if all parties are willing to move just a little.

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