Besprekingen EU-Turkije halen Cypruskwestie naar boven (en)

Met dank overgenomen van EUobserver (EUOBSERVER) i, gepubliceerd op woensdag 11 oktober 2006, 17:31.
Auteur: | By Mark Beunderman

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - A Finnish EU presidency plan to avert a "train crash" in Turkey's membership talks has sparked intense diplomatic wrangling on the Cyprus problem, with both the Cypriot government and Turkish Cypriots tabling sensitive political demands.

Helsinki is currently promoting a plan aimed at averting a full or partial suspension of Ankara's ongoing accession talks, with the EU requiring from Turkey that it opens its ports and airports to traffic from EU member state Cyprus before the end of the year.

The Finnish trade-off solution foresees that in return for Turkey fulfilling the EU's demands on Cypriot planes and vessels, the EU will make moves towards ending the economic isolation of the Turkish community in the North of Cyprus.

But the Finnish plan - primarily designed to save the Turkey talks, not to solve the Cyprus problem - has opened a pandora's box on the broader issue of the future status of the island, which has been divided since Turkish forces occupied the North in 1974.

Although Helsinki has been careful not to put its ideas on paper, diplomats say it involves a UN role in supervising the Northern Cypriot port of Famagusta which would facilitate direct trade between the Turkish Cypriots and the EU.

But Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat told Brussels reporters on Tuesday (10 October) that any UN role in Famagusta should not be expanded to the bordering town of Varosha - which has been deserted ever since the Greek Cypriots left.

The handing over of Varosha to the UN, he said, could only be part of a "give and take" as part of a later "comprehensive" peace deal for the island.

"We want unconditional lifting of the isolation of Turkish Cypriots," he said referring to a promise made by the EU after a UN peace plan was rejected by Greek Cypriots in 2004.

Ghost town Varosha

Turkish Cypriot diplomats said they are worried they will lose out on the Finnish plans, with the EU now only seeing the Cyprus issue as a "European issue," aimed at saving ties with Ankara - but forgetting the fate of the Turkish Cypriots.

At the same time, the Cypriot government in Nicosia is unlikely to co-operate in ending the isolation of the North of the island without gaining any concessions itself.

Nicosia is currently blocking a regulation on direct EU trade with the North, believing its sovereignty over the entire island is at stake.

It now demands that former residents of Varosha should be allowed to return and live in the town, according to Cypriot press reports.

Ergan airport

Meanwhile, Turkish Cypriots are demanding that any interim deal before the end of this year would also include the opening of their airport at Ergan - currently only open to flights to and from Turkey.

"We are asking the inclusion of the Ergan airport," Mr Talat said highlighting the absurdity of his having to fly via Istanbul when travelling to Brussels.

Mr Talat on Tuesday and Wednesday met with EU enlargement commissioner Olli Rehn, the commission's vice-president and former enlargement chief Guenter Verheugen as well as EU member states' foreign policy representative Javier Solana.

Meanwhile, the European Commission is increasingly throwing its weight behind the Finnish trade-off idea, with commissioner Rehn saying a deal on Northern Cyprus could "greatly enhance the climate to help us avoid a train crash later this year."

He added that "the consequences for the EU and Turkey would be very severe" if the diplomatic efforts were to fail. "We should do our utmost to avoid this," he said.


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