Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Cyprus sees reunificat­ion hope after Turkish Cypriot vote

-

NICOSIA,APRIL27, 2015

(AFP) - Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiad­es said Monday that he saw new hope of ending the island's decadeslon­g division following the election as Turkish Cypriot leader of reconcilia­tion champion Mustafa Akinci.

“At l ong last hope is created that our homeland can be reunited to create a modern state governed by EU principles, creating the prospects of cooperatio­n, peace and tranquilit­y,” Anastasiad­es told a conference in Nicosia.

“Our hand is stretched out... as an invitation for cooperatio­n. I would like to believe there will be a response so there can be prospects for security and prosperity,” the Greek Cypriot leader added.

Anastasiad­es have already congratula­ted Akinci on his election victory and will be contacting him again soon to arrange a meeting with a view to the resumption of UN-brokered reunificat­ion talks, government spokesman Nicos Christodou­lou said.

UN envoy Espen Barth Eide is due back in Cyprus from May 4 to 8 to continue preparatio­ns for the talks' resumption after the Greek Cypriots ended a six-month boycott, the United Nations said. Akinci comfortabl­y defeated nationalis­t incumbent Dervis Eroglu in a second-round runoff on Sunday for the presidency of the breakaway Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.

Akinci, a former mayor of the Turkish Cypriot part of the island's divided capital and a vocal advocate of reconcilia­tion with Anastasiad­es's internatio­nally recognised government, won 60.5 percent of the vote.

Akinci will now be tasked with heading negotiatio­ns with Anastasiad­es aimed at reunifying the Mediterran­ean island after more than 40 years of division.

A UN-monitored ceasefire line has divided the island since 1974 when Turkish troops occupied its northern third in response to an Athensinsp­ired coup seeking union with Greece.

The Turkish Cypriots, who had already pulled out of government institutio­ns in the face of communal violence in 1963, declared their breakaway state in 1983.

But it is recognised only by Turkey, which provides around a third of its budget.

Voters said they hoped for a leader who would end the Turkish Cypriots' internatio­nal isolation.

Anastasiad­es welcomed Akinci's win, tweeting on Sunday that it was “a hopeful developmen­t for our common homeland”.

The two men later spoke by telephone and expressed “the desire for genuine reunificat­ion of our country”.

The Greek Cypriot press too broadly welcomed the Turkish Cypriot election outcome.

“A page has turned with Akinci,” headlined the masscircul­ation Philelefth­eros newspaper.

The independen­t Politis daily called the result a “second spring,” while the communist Haravghi newspaper headlined that Turkish Cypriot voters had extended an “olive branch with the bloom of hope”.

Anastasiad­es told t he United Nations earlier this month that he was ready to resume reunificat­ion talks after Sunday's Turkish Cypriot election.

He had boycotted them for six months in protest at Turkish moves to explore possibile oil and gas reserves off Cyprus.

“Our hand is stretched out... as an invitation for cooperatio­n. I would like to believe there will be a response so there can be prospects for security and prosperity,” the Greek Cypriot leader added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka