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  • Cyprus annexation talk sparks debate

    Cyprus annexation talk sparks debate

    06/03/2012

    Turkey's European Affairs Minister Egemen Bagis' comments to Turkish
    Cypriot newspaper Kıbrıs sparked a debate over whether Turkey might proceed
    in annexing North Cyprus.

    By Menekse Tokyay for Southeast European Times in Istanbul -- 06/03/12
    [image: photo]

    "All options are on the table for a solution to the Cyprus issue," Turkey's
    European Affairs Minister Egemen Bagis said. [Reuters]

    Frustrated by the lack of progress over the Cyprus issue, Turkey's top
    government officials have repeatedly declared that if there is no solution
    by July 1st, when Cyprus takes over the rotating EU presidency, Turkey
    would suspend dialogue with the Union until the following presidency in
    January 2013.

    "All options are on the table for a solution to the Cyprus issue. The
    solution [that Turkey would consider] would include reunification under a
    deal that the two leaders could reach, creation of two independent states
    after an agreement between the two leaders if they are unable to reach a
    deal for reunification, or annexation of the [Turkish Republic of Northern
    Cyprus] to Turkey," Turkey's European Affairs Minister Egemen Bagis said.

    These harsh statements are mainly related to the deadlock over EU-Turkey
    relations under the conditionality of the Cyprus conflict, experts argue.

    According to Istituto Affari Internazionali Deputy Director Nathalie Tocci,
    Bagis' statements are reminiscent of Turkey's stance towards the 1997-1999
    Cyprus conflict when veiled threats of annexation were also made.

    "It is no coincidence that such threats are being made again now," Tocci
    told *SETimes*. "In both cases -- 1997-1999 and today -- Turkey's relations
    with the EU were, and are, in a dire state. In the past, because of the
    cold shower received by Turkey at the Luxembourg summit in 1997, and today
    because of the stalled accession negotiations."

    However, experts are not of the same mind concerning the greater
    significance of the statement.

    European University of Lefke's Mehmet Hasguler thinks the recent emphasis
    made by Bagis is a significant counter-move showing that there is a wide
    range of alternatives on the table for the current deadlock over the Cyprus
    issue, she told *SETimes*.

    "When AK Party came to power, it took over a heavy agenda on Cyprus and
    started to reverse the longstanding trend of accusing the Turkish community
    to block any solution."

    However, being a guarantor state in Cyprus according to the 1960 Treaty of
    Guarantee, Turkey is prohibited from any annexation scenario, Cyprus 2015
    Initiative Research Director Ahmet Sozen said.

    "Bagis risks violating the very treaty obligations of Turkey under
    international law when he -- as a formal representative of Turkey --
    discusses alternative solution models in Cyprus in this detail even for
    tactical reasons," Sozen told to *SETimes*.

    Sozen said that annexation is not only devoid of the international law
    basis, but also of popular support among Turkish Cypriots.

    "According to a public opinion poll that Cyprus 2015 Initiative conducted
    [in late 2010], 52% of the Turkish Cypriots find the 'annexation with
    Turkey' solution model as 'entirely unacceptable', while only 23% finds
    this option as 'satisfactory'."

    But, tactical or not, all moves do have a price tag.

    "Of course it is risky to show such harsh reactions concerning the Cyprus
    issue. But, if Turkey is determined to make such an annexation, we can
    assume that Turkey made a final decision about its EU membership bid,"
    according to Hasguler.

    "This should make all those -- in Cyprus, Turkey and the EU -- interested
    in a solution on the island realise how pivotal Turkey's accession
    prospects are to reconciliation in Cyprus," Tocci said.

    http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/features/2012/03/06/feature-04

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