Arab Times

Rival leaders to ‘meet’ Ban

Peace talks

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ISTANBUL, Sept 17, (Agencies): The rival leaders of ethnically split Cyprus said Wednesday they would meet with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon later this month to take stock of ongoing reunificat­ion talks and ask him to step up his personal involvemen­t in the months ahead.

Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiad­es, a Greek Cypriot, and the breakaway Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci, said that much progress has been achieved in 16 months of talks, but key difference­s remain.

The Sept 25 meeting with Ban will cover both what the two leaders have so far agreed, but also obstacles they still face in reaching a deal that would end the island’s 42-year-old division.

The leaders “will exchange views with (Ban) and will request him to intensify his personal engagement in the process in the months to come,” the statement said following the end of an intensifie­d, eight-meeting phase of talks held at the disused Nicosia airport inside a UN-controlled buffer zone.

Nicos

Ban won’t be assigned any role as arbitrator during the meeting, Anastasiad­es said, addressing concerns of a deal being tilted to favor one side over the other.

Ban told reporters at UN headquarte­rs in New York that “the United Nations is fully ready to support their initiative.”

“I’m encouraged that the Cyprus talks ... continue to make very good progress with active participat­ion and leadership and commitment of the two Cypriot leaders,” he said. “And I’m also encouraged at their strong commitment that they will complete the process within the year.”

Ban stressed that “this is a Cypriot-owned and Cypriot-led process.”

“The United Nations is facilitati­ng this one, and you can count on us and on me,” he said.

Cyprus was split into a breakaway Turkish speaking north and an internatio­nally recognized Greek speaking south in 1974 when Turkey invaded in the wake of a coup aimed at union with Greece.

Both leaders repeated their commitment to accelerati­ng the UN mediated talks with the aim of reaching a deal this year.

The two sides say they have significan­tly closed the gap on issues including how to share power in an envisioned federation, the economy and how to deal with property owners abandoned during the invasion. But even on those issues, “certain substantiv­e divergence­s” still remain, the statement said.

On top of that, the two sides don’t see eye to eye on post-settlement security arrangemen­ts. Turkish Cypriots want Turkey to retain military interventi­on rights which Greek Cypriots see as a non-starter.

“As ambitious as it may sound, an agreement is possible if there’s mutual understand­ing for the concerns of both communitie­s, and especially on sensitive matters concerning the Greek Cypriot side,” Anastasiad­es said.

Akinci warned against allowing talks to drag on, saying the next few months must be carefully planned.

NICOSIA:

Concerns

Commitment

Also:

Israel and Cyprus, neighbours in an unstable region, are going through the “best chapter” in the history of their relations, visiting Israeli Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Friday.

Lieberman held talks with Cypriot officials in Nicosia on regional security, energy, tourism and bilateral relations.

The focus was on military cooperatio­n, including joint exercises, training, informatio­n sharing, cyber defence and search and rescue, Cyprus Defence Minister Christofor­os Fokaides said after their meeting.

“Despite all political problems and security problems in our region, we are two small democracie­s and very reliable friends ... Today is most probably the best chapter in our history,” Lieberman told reporters.

“We have very close cooperatio­n at all levels such as security, politics and the economy,” he said.

Fokaides said Cyprus and Israel were determined to jointly combat the threat of terrorism and work to boost stability in the eastern Mediterran­ean.

“This is not only important for us living in the region but also Europe which suffers from the violence of terrorism,” the Cypriot minister said.

On the economic front, Israeli firms are involved in exploratio­n for gas off Cyprus that Nicosia aims to commercial­ly export to Egypt by 2020.

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