Cyprus talks end; sides agree to meet again
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Newly-appointed UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the participants had “made important progress” during the one-day conference.
The new session of peace talks for Cyprus has ended with merely an agreement for the sides to meet again at a later time to make another attempt at finding a political solution to the decades-long dispute on the Mediterranean island.
The foreign ministers of Turkey, Greece, and Britain temporarily pulled out of the talks on Thursday after failing to narrow differences on security guarantees for the island’s disputed ethnic Greek and Turkish communities.
Britain, Turkey, and Greece, are Cyprus’ so-called guarantor powers.
Newly-appointed UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, however, said the participants had “made important progress” during the one-day conference.
“Of course, there is still a lot of work to be done. We are going now to work at deputies-level to prepare what could be the proposals for, at political level, a decision to be taken,” Guterres said after the conference.
Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades and North-Cyprus President Mustafa Akinci resumed the negotiations at the Palais des Nations in Geneva, overseen by UN Special Advisor Espen Barth Eide.
Anastasiades and Akinci are leading their respective communities, and the negotiations were directed toward finding a way to reunite Cyprus as a loose federation of two constituent, largely self-governing states.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavotoglu described the talks as “useful.”
“Today’s meeting was very useful, [I’m] not disappointed,” Cavotoglu said. “We frankly shared our position on different issues, particularly, on security and guarantee issues. At the end, we found out that we have totally different positions.”
Greek Cypriot government Spokesman Nikos Christodoulides said the talks “will continue at the level of the technocrats on Jan. 18.”
Cyprus has been traditionally partitioned between ethnic Turks and Greeks.
In 1974, however, Turkey’s armed forces occupied the northern parts of Cyprus in response to Greece’s efforts to annex the Greek-speaking-majority east Mediterranean island to Athens.
Several past attempts to find a political solution have failed, and despite Greece and Turkey’s NATO alliance, they have come at times to the brink of war over Cyprus.
ME