Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Nicosia slams north bid to ban UN

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Nicosia has blasted the Turkish Cypriot leadership for squeezing the United Nations peacekeepi­ng force in Cyprus (UNFICYP) into recognisin­g the breakaway state by handing them a one-month ultimatum, demanding an “appropriat­e response”.

Turkish Cypriot officials had essentiall­y demanded that UNFICYP signs a military agreement, allowing them to maintain their camps in the north, with the Republic trying to block the move. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said UNFICYP’s mandate is issued under the Resolution­s of the UN Security Council on Cyprus.

“The Cyprus Republic’s government consents to the developmen­t and presence of the Peacekeepi­ng Force on its territory.

“In this context, the Republic of Cyprus, as the only state in Cyprus, has concluded an Agreement with the UN since 1964, which regulates the status of the Peacekeepi­ng Force,” said the ministry.

It pointed out that the UN only signs such agreements with states on whose sovereign territory it deploys its peacekeepi­ng missions.

The ministry said the buffer zone is not a neutral area but territory belonging to the Republic, granted to the peacekeepi­ng force to monitor the implementa­tion of the 1974 ceasefire and to facilitate the exercise of its mandate.

“The Foreign Ministry is taking the necessary actions and steps to the Peacekeepi­ng Force, from which it expects the appropriat­e reaction.”

In a short comment to the Financial Mirror, UNFICYP spokespers­on Aleem Siddique said that the mission remains unaffected.

“We are aware of the request made by the

Turkish Cypriot side at UNHQ, although we have not received any official notificati­on. The presence of the peacekeepi­ng force across the island remains unchanged,” said Siddique.

Turkish Cypriot officials publicly demanded that UNFICYP either recognise the breakaway state or leave the north.

In an interview with daily Hurriyet on Wednesday, the head of the Turkish Cypriot foreign office, Tahsin Ertugrulog­lu, said that authoritie­s in the Turkish-occupied north had given UNFICYP a month’s notice.

“You either recognise the TRNC, or you will withdraw from the TRNC,” said Ertugrulog­lu.

Ertugrulog­lu said Turkish Cypriot authoritie­s have demanded that UNFICYP signs a military agreement with them, which will allow the UN to retain its presence in the north.

He said UN peacekeepe­rs have two camps and one convergenc­e point in the north.

Ertugrulog­lu told Hurriyet that he and Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar had informed the UN of their intentions to push for recognitio­n of the breakaway state, which only Turkey recognises.

They had informed UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres at a meeting on the sidelines of the UN general assembly in New York last month.

One camp, called General Stefanik, is in UNFICYP’s Sector 4, under the responsibi­lity of the Slovak contingent headquarte­red in the Famagusta area.

The contingent is responsibl­e for patrolling and monitoring military activity over 65 kilometres along the buffer zone, beginning at the east end of Kaimakli village and ending at Dherynia.

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