Contact Us

Turkish Cypriots 'joint owners', not minority, Erdoğan says

President Erdoğan on Sunday said in an interview with To Vima weekly that "Turkish Cypriots will never be reduced to the status of a minority, as the Greek Cypriots wish, on an island where they are joint owners."

AFP WORLD
Published December 10,2017
Subscribe

Turkish Cypriots are "joint owners" of the divided island of Cyprus, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said in an interview Sunday, insisting negotiations will fail if they are treated otherwise.

"Turkish Cypriots will never be reduced to the status of a minority, as the Greek Cypriots wish, on an island where they are joint owners," Erdoğan told To Vima weekly.

"Negotiations are doomed to ineffectiveness if there is no change towards an understanding that Turkish Cypriots are political equals."

Cyprus has been divided since 1974, when Turkish troops invaded its northern third in response to an Athens-inspired coup seeking union with Greece.

Turkey still maintains around 35,000 troops in the self-declared statelet of around 300,000 people recognised only by Ankara.

Efforts to reunify the divided island collapsed at a UN-hosted peace summit in Switzerland in July.

In the talks, Greece had sought to end the right of intervention on Cyprus it holds with Britain and Turkey, while the Greek Cypriots also pushed for a withdrawal of Turkish troops from the former British colony which joined the European Union in 2004.

"The Greek Cypriots have a serious problem as regards power sharing... they still see Cyprus as a Greek island," Erdoğan was quoted as saying.

The last major peace push collapsed in 2004 when a proposal worked out by then UN chief Kofi Annan was accepted by most Turkish Cypriots but resoundingly dismissed by Greek Cypriots in twin referendums.

Erdoğan on Thursday made an official visit to Greece, the first by a Turkish president in 65 years.