AP Interview: UN envoy says Erdogan ready to deal on Cyprus

AP Interview: UN envoy says Erdogan ready to deal on Cyprus


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NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is ready to "play ball" on reaching a deal to reunify ethnically divided Cyprus because it would help resolve overarching regional issues including mending Turkey's relations with the European Union, a United Nations envoy said Thursday.

But Espen Barth Eide indicated that it's unclear where Erdogan wants to steer a summit in Geneva next month that aims to hammer out a comprehensive peace accord.

Greece, Turkey and Cyprus' former colonial rule Britain will participate in Jan. 9-12 summit to overcome the major hurdle of providing security in a federation made up of the Greek- and Turkish-speaking zones.

"I think Erdogan is ready to play ball and that's what they communicate," Eide told the Associated Press in an interview. But it is less clear what Turkey's negotiating position will be, he said.

Cyprus was divided into a breakaway, Turkish Cypriot north and an internationally recognized Greek Cypriot south in 1974 when Turkey invaded after a coup aiming at union with Greece.

Greece insists military intervention rights that Cyprus' 1960 constitution accorded to the three so-called 'guarantor' nations must be scrapped under any peace deal. Turkey wants to keep a troop presence in a post-settlement Cyprus; Turkish Cypriots see that as essential to their security but Greek Cypriots view it as a threat. Britain says it will abide by what the two sides on the island decide.

Eide met with Greek and Turkish officials earlier this week to help prepare a security formula that will be acceptable to all sides. The U.N. envoy said neither Greece nor Turkey wants one of Europe's most intractable problems to remain frozen, because a Cyprus deal would help resolve problems that are part of a "big picture."

The U.N. envoy said a Cyprus peace deal would go a long way in boosting cooperation on exploiting the East Mediterranean's substantial undersea gas deposits. It would also help restore frayed EU-Turkey relations, particularly regarding an agreement preventing refugees reaching Europe.

A reunified Cyprus would also have a "symbolic effect" on a strife-torn region while an expected economic boom on the island would "inspire" neighboring countries, said Eide.

But the U.N. envoy warned that failure this time may result in a change of the "status quo" on the island. He did not elaborate on what the change could entail.

He added Greek Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades and Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci feel they could work out a deal they can both "live with" on how much territory will make up the two federal zones — something that caused talks to briefly deadlock last month.

Eide said next month's Geneva summit will "almost certainly" run longer than the scheduled four days.

The U.N. envoy said if all goes well, the two leaders aim to put a finalized deal to a simultaneous vote on both sides somewhere around the middle of next year, after a few months of sorting out the details of how a deal will be implemented and explained to the public.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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