Cyprus talks at ‘critical juncture’
“Currently, we have reached a critical juncture in the process, since discussions are underway for the next steps forward,” President Nicos Anastasiades said on May 19 at a Council of Europe ministerial committee session in Nicosia.
“I have put forward a creative proposal as to the methodology we could adopt that would allow us to finally break the current impasse, bridge the differences, and establish the parameters,” the Greek Cypriot leader said.
U.N. envoy Espen Barth Eide has been at the centre of shuttle diplomacy between Anastasiades and his Turkish Cypriot counterpart, Mustafa Akıncı, on taking negotiations to the next level at Geneva.
Eide has said the rival leaders are ready for a final push but that “outstanding issues” had to be cleared up before a summit in Geneva.
“A number of substantial differences still remain... which are directly linked to our capacity as an EU member state, and the vital need for a reunited Cyprus to be a truly independent state,” Anastasiades said on May 19.
The crux of the differences is what a new Geneva summit would try to achieve.
Anastasiades is believed to want to resolve what the map of a post-settlement Cyprus would look like and the issue of security arrangements to be tackled.
On the other side, Akıncı wants a Geneva conference to address issues of power-sharing and political equality in a federal Cyprus following more than four decades of division.
In a written statement on May 19, Akıncı rejected what he termed “an effort to put pre-conditions for the Geneva talks” and warned of “new tensions” in the months ahead.
“It is obligatory to discuss in a parallel process all the important issues which have not been solved yet for being able to see the whole picture,” the Turkish Cypriot leader said.
“We warn that new tensions could be experienced in the summer months if instead of focusing on the solution, being aware of the fact that time is very tight, the unilateral hydrocarbon explorations continue.”
The Turkish Cypriots want a summit in June as new oil and gas drills offshore Cyprus are expected in July - a process which Ankara wants halted until the reunification talks have reached an outcome.
A previous conference in Geneva in January involved the guarantor powers for Cyprus - Greece, Turkey and Britain - but they failed to agree on a post-peace security strategy.
The two sides have been engaged in fragile peace talks since May 2015 that observers have seen as the best chance in years to reunify the island.
The talks have gone further than any previous peace initiatives over the decades.
Much of the progress until has been based on the strong personal rapport between Anastasiades and Akıncı.
The eastern Mediterranean island has been divided since 1974 when Turkish troops made a military intervention in response to an Athens-inspired coup seeking union with Greece.