Turkish president: Two-state deal only way for Cyprus peace
The only route to lasting peace
on ethnically divided Cyprus is through the international community’s
acceptance of two separate states on the east Mediterranean island nation,
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Monday.
Erdogan said that a “permanent
and sustainable solution” to the country’s division “can only be possible” by
taking into account that there are “two separate states and two separate
people.”
“The international community will
sooner or later accept this reality,” Erdogan told Turkish Cypriot lawmakers in
Cyprus’ breakaway north before celebrations to mark the 47th anniversary of a
Turkish invasion that split the island along ethnic lines.
Turkey’s 1974 invasion came in
the wake of a Greek junta-backed coup that aimed at union with Greece. Only
Turkey recognizes a Turkish Cypriot declaration of independence and keeps
35,000 troops there.
In a 1983 resolution, the U.N.
Security Council denounced the Turkish Cypriots’ secessionist move as legally
invalid and called for its withdrawal. The European Union has also ruled out a
two-state deal. European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen said in
Nicosia earlier this month that the 27 member-bloc which Cyprus joined in 2004
would “never, ever” accept such an arrangement.
But Turkey and the Turkish
Cypriots say a two-state deal is the only way to peace because nearly five
decades of negotiations based on forging a federation have led nowhere. They
fault Greek Cypriots’ unwillingness to “accept the realities” and see Turkish
Cypriots as “equal partners.”
Cyprus’ internationally
recognized government seated in the island’s Greek Cypriot south says there can
be no deviation from a 1977 deal to reach a formal peace accord by negotiating
a federation made up of a Turkish Cypriot and a Greek Cypriot zone.
But the majority Greek Cypriots
object to Turkey’s demand for a permanent military presence on the island amid
fears that it would turn the island into Ankara’s “protectorate.” They also
push back against a Turkish Cypriot demand for veto rights, fearing Ankara’s
meddling in Cypriot internal affairs.
Cypriot President Nicos
Anastasiades said Erdogan’s remarks were “an expected repeat of Turkey’s
unacceptable positions.”
Cyprus’ division has fueled
tensions over hydrocarbon deposits in the eastern Mediterranean and continues
to act as a major impediment to Turkey’s already troubled bid to join the EU.
A fervent supporter of a
two-state deal, Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar also advocates for even
closer ties to Ankara.
But many Turkish Cypriots object
to what they see as Erdogan’s heavy hand in their own matters as pat of his bid
for absolute political and economic control of the north.
Lawmakers from two left-wing
Turkish Cypriot parties, the Republican Turkish Party and the Communal
Liberation Party which garnered a combined 30% of the vote in 2018
parliamentary elections boycotted Erdogan’s address to parliament to underscore
the point.
Meanwhile, hundreds of Greek
Cypriots staged a protest against Erdogan’s visit in Dherynia village near
Varosha, an abandoned suburb of the town of Famagusta in the north that until
recently had been off-limits and under strict Turkish military control.
Varosha had remained empty and
barren since 1974, but Turkey and Turkish Cypriot authorities last year allowed
access to the area. That enraged many of Varosha’s Greek Cypriot residents who
saw the move as a bid to pressure them into relinquishing their rights to their
properties.
Protester Eleni Marangou said
Turkish Cypriots also joined the protest to voice their wish for a peace deal
reunifying Cyprus.
“Famagusta residents haven’t
forgotten their town and are united in demanding it back as well as an
agreement that reunifies our country,” Marangou told the Associated Press. “We
want the powerful of this world to hear our voice.”