The Scotsman

Cyprus divisions could end as UN announces reunificat­ion talks

- By EDITH LEDERER

United Nations Secretaryg­eneral Antonio Guterres has announced that the rival leaders of ethnically divided Cyprus have agreed on new talks in Geneva this month, a significan­t step forward which could see the final round of negotiatio­ns on a peace agreement to reunify the Mediterran­ean island.

Mr Guterres invited Greek Cypriot president Nicos Anastasiad­es and Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci to a working dinner at UN headquarte­rs to try and break an impasse.

Two years of negotiatio­ns have made significan­t strides, but a dispute over how a final summit aiming for a reunificat­ion deal should proceed brought talks to a standstill late last month.

Cyprus was split into a Greek Cypriot south and a Turkish Cypriot north in 1974 when Turkey invaded after a coup by Cypriots who supported uniting the island with Greece. Turkish Cypriots declared an independen­t state in 1983, but only Turkey recognises it and still maintains around 35,000 troops there.

Mr Anastasiad­es insisted on first dealing with the issue of the withdrawal of Turkish troops that Greek Cypriots consider a threat. He has proposed that an internatio­nal police force oversee postreunif­ication security, but the minority Turkish Cypriots see Turkish troops and military interventi­on rights accorded to Ankara as their only protection.

Mr Akinci insisted he wanted no conditions and that the Geneva summit should be a give-and-take on all issues.

Mr Guterres announced that both leaders agreed the issue of security is “of vital importance” and “an essential element in reaching an overall agreement and in building trust between the two communitie­s” – and would be given a high priority in Geneva.

He said his special adviser on Cyprus, Espen Barth Eide, will engage with all participan­ts “in preparatio­n of the common documents to guide discussion­s on security and guarantees”.

Mr Eide called off mediation efforts on 26 May following the disagreeme­nt between Mr Anastasiad­es and Mr Akinci but said three days later that despite the breakdown “we are indeed very, very close – actually more close than most people seem to understand” to an agreement to reunite Cyprus.

Mr Guterres did not announce a date for the new round of talks, saying they would be held “soon” after consultati­ons with the three guarantors of Cyprus’ security – Greece, Turkey and the United Kingdom.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom