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ANKARA: Turkey may change foreign policy regarding Cyprus by 2010

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  • ANKARA: Turkey may change foreign policy regarding Cyprus by 2010

    Today's Zaman

    27 September 2009, Sunday

    Turkey may change foreign policy regarding Turkish Cyprus by 2010

    Turkish foreign policy will probably have a different outlook
    regarding the Cyprus issue by 2010 if reunification talks on the
    island fail.

    Turkey will certainly face many challenges trying to get the Turkish
    Republic of Northern Cyprus (KKTC) recognized by other countries.

    Speaking at the 64th Session of the UN General Assembly on Thursday,
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an said, `A peace plan
    to unify the island drawn [up] as a result of the second phase of the
    negotiations should be brought to referendum by spring 2010 before the
    presidential election in Turkish Cyprus.' Warning about the
    possibility that Greek Cypriots may fail to accept a peace plan for a
    second time, ErdoÄ?an implied that Turkey may take steps to lift
    the economic isolation. `If the Greek Cypriots will not again agree on
    a peace plan like the 2004 Annan plan to unify the island, then
    normalizing the status of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus in
    the international arena will be a must that can no longer be delayed,'
    ErdoÄ?an warned UN-member countries. Stressing that they can no
    longer accept protracted problems, ErdoÄ?an said: `It must be
    understood that negotiations cannot last forever. The present window
    of opportunity cannot stay open forever, and there is an absolute need
    to make the process successful.'

    This statement appears to be rather a remarkable indication that
    Turkey will take steps to get the KKTC recognized. Though diplomatic
    efforts for the recognition of Turkish Cyprus have not visibly
    increased since the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) came to
    power in 2002, this is the first time Turkey has explicitly made it
    obvious that it may launch diplomatic efforts to promote recognition
    of the KKTC as an independent state since 2004. Northern Cyprus is in
    an unfavorable position compared to Greek Cyprus, since southern
    Cyprus is a member of the EU yet northern Cyrus is severely deprived
    under hefty economic isolation.

    Greek Cyprus says solution is far

    While meeting with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Greek Cypriot
    leader Dimitris Christofias said the solution of the Cyprus issue is
    very difficult to accomplish. `Saying no to the 2004 UN plan in Cyprus
    means saying no to the UN in the peace process,' Mehmet
    Hasgüler, one of the most prominent experts on Cyprus, said to
    Sunday's Zaman while evaluating the speech ErdoÄ?an made at the
    UN General Assembly on Thursday with respect to the recognition of
    Turkish Cyprus in case a peace plan is rejected by Greek Cyprus in
    2010.

    `Greek Cyprus was accepted into the EU a week after it rejected the
    Annan plan,' Hasgüler continued. `A normative assumption held
    by the EU then was that Turkey and Turkish Cyprus would take steps
    toward the unification of the island.' Many governments before the
    ruling AK Party's government had sought to make other countries
    recognize Turkish Cyprus. However, long-stalled negotiations following
    the Annan plan referendum in 2004 resumed in September 2008 when the
    two leaders of both sides of Cyprus decided to meet face to face to
    discuss the disputed points in the unification of the two parts of the
    island. The first phase of the negotiations came to an end in August,
    and a month later, the second phase of the negotiations t problem to
    the international level easily. Starting in spring 2010, Turkey may
    initiate a controlled diplomatic process for Turkish Cyprus'
    recognition,' Hasgüler said. Listing the difficulties,
    Hasgüler stated that the United Nations Security Council's
    Resolution 541 condemning Turkey's land grab in Cyprus in 1983 does
    not allow any UN member countries to recognize Turkish
    Cyprus. `Nonetheless, as a permanent member in the Security Council,
    Russia or China may veto this resolution, and thus countries may start
    to recognize it,' the expert stated. Hasgüler claimed that if
    Turkey recognizes Georgia's breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia, then Russia may consider recognizing the KKTC. `If political
    recognition will not be possible, at least the lifting of economic
    isolation may be a priority for Turkey. Malaysia, Azerbaijan and some
    African countries may lead the list in recognizing northern Cyprus if
    Turkey starts the diplomatic process for it,' Hasgüler said.

    No tolerance for second rejection

    In May 2004 the rejection by Greek Cyprus of the Annan plan to unify
    the island steered the process of recognition of Turkish Cyprus
    reasonably well particularly after Azerbaijan said it would recognize
    Turkish Cyprus. During his visit to Turkey in early 2004, Azerbaijani
    President Ä°lham Aliyev said they would recognize the KKTC if
    Greek Cypriots said no to the Annan plan during the
    referendum. However, the EU pressured Azerbaijan not to recognize the
    KKTC, threatening to recognize the self-declared Nagorno-Karabakh
    Republic, an Azerbaijani territory occupied by Armenia in the early
    1990s. `Greece and Greek Cypriots even sent an official letter to the
    Foreign Ministry, noting that they should immediately abandon the idea
    of recognizing northern Cyprus. In turn they would recognize
    Nagorno-Karabakh's independence,' said Vugar Gojayev, then the
    International Crisis Group coordinator of Azerbaijan. `This is the
    reason why Azerbaijan prefers to stay neutral in this issue,' he
    added. Considering Georgia and Azerbaijan have their own issues with
    breakaway regions, it will be hard for these countries to recognize
    the KKTC during the initial stage.

    In contrast, Turkish Center for International Relations and Strategic
    Analysis (TÃ`RKSAM) head Sinan OÄ?an told Sunday's Zaman:
    `Russia will not recognize the KKTC. There are nearly 50,000 offshore
    Russian companies in Greek Cyprus, and these companies comprise 12
    percent of southern Cyprus' national income.' Pointing to
    Greek-Russian relations throughout history, OÄ?an said, `Greek
    Cyprus and Greece have cultural and historical ties with Russia, and
    this will play a role in the recognition of Turkish Cyprus.'

    27 September 2009, Sunday
    MAHÄ°R ZEYNALOV Ä°STANBUL
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