Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Coalition partner announces withdrawal from Turkish Cypriot government

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THE PEOPLE’S Party (HP) announced its withdrawal from the coalition government with the National Unity Party (UBP) in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), reports said yesterday.

The party’s chairperso­n, Yenal Senin, announced the decision late Tuesday, saying that his party will continue to act with a sense of responsibi­lity until a new government is formed.

Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Kudret Özersay, who is a HP lawmaker from the city of Lefkoşa (Nicosia), criticized the government for announcing plans for the ghost town of Varosha (Maraş).

He claimed that the government’s announceme­nt on opening the city was misleading because the area’s military status has not been changed and a Cabinet decision would be required to modify that status.

He also criticized Prime Minister Ersin Tatar for informing him about the decision just a few hours before its announceme­nt and using the matter as a “tool” for the upcoming elections.

Özersay’s remarks followed Tatar’s recent visit to Ankara on Tuesday. The prime minister announced that the beaches in the abandoned town would be reopened today.

In response to the People’s Party’s withdrawal from the coalition, Tatar said the government will continue to serve and the constituti­onal process will proceed.

“The National Unity Party (UBP) will take into considerat­ion other coalition options or snap elections following the presidenti­al election on Sunday and will make the best decision for our people,” Tatar said.

He continued by criticizin­g the HP for its announceme­nt of the decision at such a critical time when he reinaugura­ted with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan the 80-kilometer (49.7-mile) pipeline project to send fresh water to the island under the Mediterran­ean and open public access to Varosha’s beaches.

“We believe this was not the right decision that would benefit the country,” Tatar said regarding the HP’s withdrawal.

He also rejected Özersay’s claims that he was bypassed in the process.

“I personally called the foreign minister and informed him about the situation after our decision about Maraş was finalized,” Tatar said, adding that he also thanked Özersay for his work in that respect.

He also noted that he expects all parties to meet on the beaches of Maraş today and display solidarity, as he said opening the abandoned town was a “national cause.”

Varosha was a famous resort region in Cyprus that boasted a capacity of 10,000 beds across more than 100 hotels; however, it has been closed since 1974.

That same year, Turkish military forces intervened on the island following a Greekinspi­red coup.

The coup was the result of decadelong interethni­c violence and terrorism targeting Turkish Cypriots, who were forced to live in enclaves when Greek Cypriots unilateral­ly changed the constituti­on in 1963 and stripped the island’s Turks of their political rights.

The city is protected by a 1984 United Nations Security Council resolution stating that the empty town can only be resettled by its original inhabitant­s.

If the Greek Cypriots had accepted, the 2004 U.N. Cyprus reunificat­ion plan, the Annan Plan, Varosha would now be back under Greek Cypriot control and the residents back in their homes.

Despite this, the majority of Greek Cypriots voted against the plan, whereas the Turkish Cypriots voted for it.

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