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Cyprus still facing uncertain future

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  • Cyprus still facing uncertain future

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    December 27, 2004, Monday
    02:05:08 Central European Time

    Cyprus still facing uncertain future

    By Masis der Parthogh

    Nicosia

    When Cyprus joined the European Union on May 1, celebrations on the
    island were muted, unlike the mood in the nine other new enlargement
    states. The year had kicked off uneasily after United Nations
    Secretary General Kofi Annan had tried to secure a solution that
    would have reunited the island after a 30 years of division. The U.N.
    chief finalised a document initially conceived in November 2002 and
    put it to separate referenda to the main Greek Cypriot and Turkish
    Cypriot communities. The former rejected the plan outright as it
    failed to guarantee the pullout of Turkey's 35,000-strong garrison
    stationed in the north since Ankara invaded and occupied the
    territory in 1974. No other assurances were given about the reduction
    of the 65,000 settlers from Anatolia either. On the other hand, the
    majority of Turkish Cypriots embraced the "Annan Plan" in the April
    24 poll, saying it brought them closer to autonomy within a federal
    state of two equal partners. In theory, at least, Europe had expected
    a reunited Cyprus to join the Union, with several phases of the U.N.
    plan already implemented by summer, when a significant number of
    Greek Cypriot refugees would have returned to the lands they lost
    three decades earlier. However, the "No" vote of the Greek Cypriot
    referendum left a bitter feeling among both communities, with the
    Turkish Cypriots expressing greater mistrust and pushing them closer
    to the patronage of Ankara. Incentives were supposed to come into
    force throughout the year to encourage trade and movement along the
    180-kilometre "Green Line" of division. Barbed wire still separates
    the 700,000 Orthodox Greek Cypriots from the 200,000 Moslem Turkish
    Cypriots, with only five checkpoints where people can make the
    crossing to the other side. Cyprus President Tassos Papadopoulos was
    widely expected to cast a veto at the December 17 summit in Brussels
    and block Turkey from joining the E.U. unless it offered full
    recognition to all ten new member states through an extension of the
    Customs Union agreement. The Dutch Presidency intervened and reached
    a compromise, partly satisfying the British and U.S. demands for
    Turkey's unconditional membership, while the Greek Cypriots may
    exercise their veto prior to the October 3 start of accession talks
    with Ankara. "I warned my (E.U.) counterparts that if Turkey does not
    meet its commitments, we reserve the right to block the start of
    accession negotiations, estimated to begin on October 3,"
    Papadopoulos said in media interviews. But he ruled out any
    re-engagement on the same U.N. plan he led Greek Cypriots to reject
    in April. "As it stands, that plan is never going to be put before
    the people again." This is where Turkey's abilities to reach a
    compromise will come in, as it has to persuade the U.N. chief and
    public opinion of its clear intentions to help resolve the Cyprus
    dispute, while respecting human rights in its own country as regards
    religious freedom, Kurdish rights and recognition of the Armenian
    genocide in 1915. Failure to do so will put on hold all its hopes of
    ever joining the European club within the next 15 years or so, during
    which time the "Cyprus problem" would remain unresolved and the
    Turkish Cypriots would still be over-dependent on handouts from
    Ankara. dpa mdp ch
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