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UN envoy says new Cyprus talks 'best chance' for island

Wednesday's talks in Switzerland offer 'unique opportunity' to solve decades-long dispute, Espen Barth Eide says

Ersin Çelik
09:20 - 28/06/2017 Wednesday
Update: 09:21 - 28/06/2017 Wednesday
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Working dinner ahead of Cyprus peace talks in Switzerland
Working dinner ahead of Cyprus peace talks in Switzerland

The upcoming Cyprus peace talks in Switzerland are the "best, but not the last chance" to solve the long-standing dispute on the divided Mediterranean island, according to the UN chief's special adviser on Cyprus on Tuesday.

"It is a unique opportunity because after all of these decades of division it is possible to solve, and I really hope that this is the spirit by which everybody goes into this meeting," Espen Barth Eide told a news conference in Geneva ahead of Wednesday's talks in Crans-Montana.

Eide said that the UN would not submit a "common document" to guide the discussions on security and guarantees as it was announced earlier in June.

"The Special Adviser of the Secretary-General, Mr. Espen [Barth] Eide, will engage with all participants in the preparation of a common document to guide the discussions on security and guarantees, based on the outcome of the meetings of the conference on Cyprus in Geneva and Mont Pelerin," a June 5 statement said.

The UN envoy added that foreign ministers of Turkey, the U.K. and Greece were expected to take part in the week-long talks as guarantor countries. EU will also participate as observer.

In a statement on Tuesday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said: "The opportunity for the reunification of Cyprus is now finally before us."

"I call on all concerned players to seize this opportunity, for Cyprus first and foremost, but also for the wider Eastern Mediterranean region," he said.

Guterres urged all participants in the talks to "demonstrate the will and leadership required to conclude a comprehensive settlement".

On Monday, Turkish Cypriot President Mustafa Akinci described the talks as a "decision conference" for the future of Cyprus.

"I will set out on this journey with this positive thought in mind and a cautious optimism," Akinci said.

The re-start of Cyprus conference for June 28 was announced earlier this month after Guterres' meeting with Turkish and Greek Cypriot leaders in New York.

The conference will host Akinci and Greek Cypriot leader Nicos Anastasiades.

The Eastern Mediterranean island has been divided since 1974, when a Greek Cypriot coup was followed by violence against the island’s Turks, and Ankara's intervention as a guarantor power.

Akinci and Anastasiades have been involved in reunification talks to create a federal state since May 2015.

The pair met several times in Geneva last year, but their last meeting in February was fraught with controversy over a Greek Cypriot decision to introduce a commemoration of the 1950 Enosis referendum on unification with Greece.

Both sides had agreed on most of the issues in the reunification deal but the sticking points, including a security and guarantees system, remain unresolved.

#Antonio Guterres
#Cyprus
#Espen Barth Eide
#Mustafa Akinci
#peace talks
7 years ago