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Landmark flight travels from Azerbaijan to North Cyprus without stop

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  • Landmark flight travels from Azerbaijan to North Cyprus without stop

    Agence France Presse
    July 27 2005

    Landmark flight travels from Azerbaijan to North Cyprus without
    stopping in Turkey


    BAKU: An Azerbaijani airliner headed to North Cyprus Wednesday on the
    first direct commercial flight to the breakaway state in three
    decades, the Baku-based privately owned carrier said. "A group of
    businessmen will depart from Baku at 9 p.m. on a chartered flight,"
    said Imair legal advisor Cavid Heydarli.

    Airline officials have said they may begin regular flights between
    Baku and north Nicosia's Tymbou (Ercan in Turkish) airport as early
    as September.

    The break-away Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), proclaimed
    in 1983, has been entirely dependent on Turkey for its air links to
    the outside world.

    All flights serving Ercan or North Cyprus's second airport of
    Lefkoniko (Gecitkale) near the eastern city of Famagusta have
    previously made an obligatory stopover in Turkey, the only country to
    recognize the TRNC.

    The decision to launch direct flights between Baku and Northern Cyprus
    was announced by Azeri President Ilham Aliyev on June 30 in talks with
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan as part of a bid to set up
    ties with North Cyprus.

    In addition to direct flights, Azerbaijan, a key ally of Turkey, also
    announced last month that it would start accepting Turkish Cypriot
    passports, becoming only the second state after Turkey to do so.

    In order to travel abroad, Turkish Cypriots need to acquire
    internationally accepted passports - some get them from Turkey,
    others from former colonial power Britain.

    Other Turkish Cypriots have obtained passports from the
    internationally recognized Cyprus government, derided as a Greek
    Cypriot administration by both Ankara and the Turkish Cypriots.

    Both Azerbaijani moves have been hailed by Turkish Cypriot leaders as
    steps that will serve to break the international isolation of their
    state, which depends heavily on Turkey for survival.


    Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat and other TRNC politicians
    will meet the Azeri delegation, who will also hold talks with Turkish
    Cypriot businessmen before leaving the island on Sunday.

    Baku's decisions appear to have angered Greece, the Cyprus
    government's main foreign backer.

    Following Imair's announcement that it would open the air link
    earlier this month, moves by a Greek telecommunications operator to
    establish a partnership with an operator in Azerbaijan's rival
    Armenia have been viewed by the Azeri press as retaliation.

    A story headlined: "Greece answers Azerbaijan for Northern Cyprus" by
    the Trend news agency on July 22 detailed a partnership agreement
    between Greece's Intrakom and an Armenian provider that operates in
    the contested Nagorno Karabakh enclave of Azerbaijan.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia fought a war for control over mainly
    ethnic-Armenian Nagorno Karabakh in the early 1990s.

    Armenian forces took control of the region but its status has yet to
    be settled and it is still internationally recognized as part of
    Azerbaijan.

    Azerbaijan views the activity of foreign entities in Karabakh as a
    violation of its sovereignty over the territory, an argument that is
    backed by authorities in Ankara.

    Like North Cyprus, the unrecognized Nagorno Karabakh republic faces
    international isolation and has few links to the outside world save
    through Armenia.

    Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when Turkish troops invaded its
    northern region in response to an Athens-backed military coup seeking
    to unite the island with Greece. - AFP
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