Greek Cypriots delaying resolution, says Turkish Cypriot FM

Greek Cypriots delaying resolution, says Turkish Cypriot FM

ANKARA – Anadolu Agency
Greek Cypriots delaying resolution, says Turkish Cypriot FM

Turkish Cypriot Foreign Minister Tahsin Ertuğruloğlu. AA photo

All Greek Cypriots are trying to do is leave the current negotiation process hanging, Turkish Cypriot Foreign Minister Tahsin Ertuğruloğlu has said.        

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Ertuğruloğlu said the whole negotiation process was based on “inequality.”        
He referred back to the Annan Plan, which was a United Nations proposal to resolve the Cyprus dispute, through restructuring of the divided island as a federation of two states under the name "United Republic of Cyprus."        

In 2004, a referendum proposed by then U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan was held but reunification was rejected by the Greek Cypriot side in a referendum.        

"It does not suit the Greek Cypriot side's interests to say yes to a proposal such as the Annan Plan. They know that they won't approve an agreement that puts the Turkish Cypriots on an equal basis with them.

They also know that saying no a second time will not benefit them either.        

“Therefore, their policy is to avoid going to another referendum, and just leave this process hanging, by suspending it now and then. We should not let this happen. It is clear that the current process is no longer sustainable,” Ertuğruloğlu said.        

“Despite attempts to prove otherwise, we are dealing with a process where the Greek Cypriot side is recognized as Republic of Cyprus, whereas the Turkish Cypriot community is being portrayed as an ethnic minority within this Republic, whose political identity and sovereignty are being refused.

“We are not sitting on equal terms,” he said.        

He added that the proposal of uniting the island as a bi-zonal, bi-communal federation “would carry the possibility of leaving the future of Turkish Cypriots at the mercy of the Greek Cypriot side “if the sensitivities of the Turkish Cypriot side are ignored.”

Ertuğruloğlu suggested including the guarantor states of Turkey, Greece and the United Kingdom in the process, saying meetings should also be held with these countries.        

“Turkey's guarantorship is indispensable to us. It is something which is not even open to discussion,” he said, adding that the telltale sign of guarantorship was Turkey's right to unilateral intervention.

“We are the equal owners of the Cyprus island. We are not a nation that will be brought under the yoke of the Greek Cypriots, or left at their mercy. Our only assurance and guarantor in this matter is of course our motherland [Turkey],” he said.        

The eastern Mediterranean island was divided into a Turkish Cypriot side in the north and a Greek Cypriot side in the south after a 1974 coup on the island was followed by the military intervention of Turkey as a guarantor power.        

Reunification talks between the Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot side on the island resumed in May 2015, after having been stalled in October 2014 due to a dispute about gas exploration around the island.        

The talks between Turkish Cypriot President Mustafa Akıncı and Greek Cypriot leader Nicos Anastasiades were last suspended in late May.        

Anastasiades had canceled a meeting with Akıncı after refusing to attend a dinner hosted by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan during the World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul, upon being told that the Turkish Cypriot leader had also been invited. He thus cut short his trip to Istanbul.

Anastasiades also canceled a meeting set with Special U.N. Cyprus Envoy Espen Barth Eide.        

The interrupted peace talks resumed on June 8.