Cyprus Today

‘Solution chance not been lost in Crans-Montana’

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GREEK Cypriot leader Nicos Anastasiad­es claimed on Monday that no chance had been lost during reunificat­ion talks in Switzerlan­d last summer to solve the Cyprus problem, arguing that the Greek Cypriot side wanted a truly independen­t state.

He was responding to criticism from Akel-backed candidate Stavros Malas during an evening TV debate between the five main contenders for the presidency ahead of tomorrow’s elections.

Mr Malas appeared to gain the upper hand in the first part of the televised debate, which dealt with the Cyprus problem.

“Let us not cultivate a climate that we lost a chance, we haven’t lost any chance,” Mr Anastasiad­es said of the talks in the Swiss resort of Crans-Montana last July.

But Mr Malas cited the UN secretary-general’s statement that a “historic chance has been lost at Crans-Montana” and said it was a position shared by many Greek Cypriots who blame Mr Anastasiad­es for causing the collapse.

Mr Malas also attacked Diko leader Nicolas Papadopoul­os who gave a vague overview of what he planned to do if elected.

Mr Papadopoul­os said he would first visit the Greek prime minister and then the UNSG to explain positions, in line with the mandate handed to him by the people, to withdraw existing proposals made by Mr Anastasiad­es.

Mr Malas wondered what Mr Papadopoul­os would tell the Greek premier when Alexis Tsipras himself believes that the problem must be resolved soon to avoid worse developmen­ts.

“Tell him what? Mr Tsipras said a bizonal, bicommunal federation is the basis of the talks and we need to continue immediatel­y based on this,” Mr Malas said.

Giorgos Lillikas said the convergenc­es struck between Mr Anastasiad­es and the TRNC’s President Mustafa Akinci as well as Demetris Christofia­s and Mehmet Ali Talat previously served to form a bizonal bicommunal federation that legalised partition instead of overturnin­g it. He said that form of solution was a catastroph­e and a referendum should be held for the people to decide if that was the way forward.

Far right Elam leader Christos Christou said the solution favoured by his party was that of a unitary state.

He said the Cyprus problem had to be reposition­ed as a problem of invasion and occupation and not a bicommunal issue.

Mr Anastasiad­es had to defend his government’s achievemen­ts in the second part of the debate, which delved into domestic affairs and the economy.

He was asked what new product his administra­tion had created, with the journalist suggesting the so-called “success story” was mainly based on selling passports to make a quick buck and risking creating another property bubble in the process.

“You can’t even register halloumi,” journalist Giorgos Kaskanis told the president.

The president argued that other expedienci­es were to blame for the delay in registerin­g halloumi, and that the progress achieved following the 2013 collapse was owed to the right incentives being provided by the government, which attracted 7 billion euros in investment, including the creation of a casino resort and marinas.

Some 7 per cent of GDP came from the education sector, he said.

He said recovery of the constructi­on industry was not just owed to the sale of passports. “There’s wider activity.”

Mr Malas was the recipient of a large amount of flak in this area because of his participat­ion in the Christofia­s administra­tion, which is widely blamed for the economic collapse. He sought to distance himself, arguing that he had been health minister for 14 months while Diko, Mr Papadopoul­os’ party, had been a coalition partner of Akel for three years.

He accused Mr Anastasiad­es of not giving any extra cash for research and developmen­t and used a tweet the president sent about the casino being a decades-old vision against him.

“A casino is not a vision,” Mr Malas said.

 ??  ?? Presidenti­al candidates at the start of the debate
Presidenti­al candidates at the start of the debate

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