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Cyprus president to meet breakaway north’s new leader — spokesman

By AFP - Oct 19,2020 - Last updated at Oct 19,2020

NICOSIA — Republic of Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades and the newly elected leader of the divided island’s breakaway north have agreed to meet, a spokesman for his government said on Monday.

Voters in the north on Sunday narrowly elected right-wing Turkish Cypriot nationalist Ersin Tatar, who was backed by Ankara, at a time of heightened tensions in the eastern Mediterranean.

Tatar is an advocate of a two-state solution, and held the post of premier in the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), recognised only by Ankara.

He edged out previous Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci, 72, a supporter of reunification with the Greek Cypriot south.

“The verdict of our compatriots to elect Mr Ersin Tatar as the new leader of the Turkish Cypriot community is fully respected,” said Greek Cypriot leader Anastasiades, urging him to back a new United Nations led peace initiative.

“I congratulate Mr Tatar and look forward to a familiarity meeting as soon as possible,” the president added in a statement.

A spokesman for Anastasiades’ government later said that the president and Tatar had agreed to meet in the UN-patrolled buffer zone, that has for decades separated the north and south.

“The President of the Republic proposed to Mr Tatar to meet as soon as possible for a first acquaintance and contact, something that Mr Tatar accepted,” said Kyriacos Koushos in a statement, giving no timeframe for the planned meeting.

Tatar, 60, clinched his surprise victory in a second round of presidential elections, winning 51.7 per cent of the vote.

 

‘Ready and determined’ 

 

Cyprus has been divided since Turkey invaded and occupied its northern third in 1974 in reaction to a Greek-engineered coup aiming to annex the island.

Anastasiades said he was “ready and determined” to respond to UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres’ calls for a reengagement in the peace process to ensure talks resume after a three-year hiatus.

“I want to hope that Mr Tatar shows the same willingness,” he said, ahead of his government spokesman disclosing that the president had contacted the UN chief of mission in Cyprus who agreed to make the arrangements for their meeting.

Guterres had said he will rekindle the peace process after elections in the north of Cyprus.

The last attempt at UN-mediated negotiations collapsed in Switzerland in July 2017.

Tatar controversially received the open backing of Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan during the election campaign.

In a victory speech to hundreds of cheering and Turkish flag-waving supporters, Tatar thanked Turkey’s head of state and said: “We deserve our sovereignty — we are the voice of Turkish Cypriots.”

Erdogan was swift to celebrate the victory, which followed a high 67 per cent turnout at the polls.

Under Erdogan, Turkey has become an increasingly assertive regional power that is now engaged in a bitter dispute with Greece and Cyprus over oil and gas reserves in eastern Mediterranean waters.

The European Union has deplored Turkey’s drilling for hydrocarbons in disputed waters and warned Ankara against further “provocations”, while multiple countries have staged military drills in the region in recent months.

Earlier in October, Turkish troops angered the Republic of Cyprus by reopening public access to the fenced-off seaside ghost town of Varosha for the first time since Turkish forces invaded the north.

The reopening was announced jointly by Erdogan and Tatar at a meeting in Ankara, just days before the first round of polling.

It drew EU and UN criticism and sparked demonstrations in the Republic of Cyprus, which exercises its authority over the island’s south.

A second round of voting, if needed, is scheduled for November 24.

 

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