Category: Cyprus
“The king departed with the entire armada from Tripoli in Libya, and went toward Cyprus, sacking the Turkish coast and setting it red with blood and flames, and they loaded all the ships with the many riches they had taken.” The White Knight: Tirant To Blanc – written and copyrighted by Robert S. Rudder
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The Baffling Short-sightedness in the EU-Turkey-Cyprus Triangle
Diehard believers in Turkey’s European future had, for a brief moment, hung their hopes on the European Parliament (EP) as the key to unlocking the poisonous stalemate in Turkey’s ailing accession process. The glimmer of light had come with the Lisbon Treaty, which could have been used tounblock the stalemate over the Direct Trade Regulation (DTR) between the EU and northern Cyprus by granting a voice to the EP on the matter.Breaking the stalemate would not have magically removed all obstacles to Turkey’s protracted accession process. But it would have breathed newlife and instilled a dose of much-needed optimism in the troubled relations between Turkey and the Union.Alas, that opportunity has been lost and, with it, the short-term hope of a rosier future for Cyprus, Turkey and the EU as a whole.Read full document… -
EU decision on trade deals further blow to Cyprus solution hopes
A decision by a committee of the European Parliament ruling that the issue of direct trade with Turkish Cypriots is not under jurisdiction of the parliament has sparked bitter reaction from both Turkey and Turkish Cypriots since they have considered the decision as encouraging the Greek Cypriot side to further drag their feet in efforts for finding a solution to the decades old Cyprus dispute. The European Parliament’s legal affairs committee decided on Monday night that members of the European Parliament (MEPs) do not have co-decision powers over a proposal by the European Commission to allow direct trade between the KKTC and EU member states. The decision — 18 in favor, five against and one abstention — is regarded to mean that the Commission’s direct trade regulation is now solely in the hands of EU members, including Greek Cyprus. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan recalled on Wednesday that the European Union has so far failed to keep promises given to Turkish Cypriots back in 2004 for easing their international isolation. Erdoğan, speaking at a joint press conference following his talks with Finnish Prime minister Mari Kiviniemi during an official visit to Helsinki, also recalled that some member states have blocked several negotiation chapters with Turkey, claiming that Turkey has to live up to its obligations in the Ankara Protocol, which includes opening up Turkish air and sea ports to Greek Cypriot vessels and aircraft.
Turkey refuses to lift the ban, saying that the EU should lift the economic isolation on Turkish Cyprus because the country is displaying a political will to reunify the island. In July 2005, while signing the Ankara Protocol extending its customs union to the then-new member states of the EU, Turkey at the same time issued a declaration saying that its signature did not mean it had recognized the Greek Cypriot administration.
Allowing Turkish ports and airports to Greek Cypriot traffic requires parliamentary approval and the EU’s approach is not constructive at all for gaining such approval from the Turkish parliament, Erdoğan said in Helsinki.
“It is obvious that this development will create a serious crisis of confidence between Turkish Cypriot people and the EU,” the KKTC presidency said in a written statement released on Tuesday evening, while calling the committee decision on the Direct Trade Regulation as “saddening.”
In 2004, the European Commission proposed direct trade with the KKTC, which is recognized only by Turkey, but efforts to bring the proposal to life have been blocked by Greek Cyprus, a full member of the EU. The Greek Cypriots, who rejected a UN plan to reunite the island, were admitted to the EU as representatives of all of Cyprus — days after voting against the reunification plan.
The debate at the European Parliament’s legal affairs committee focused on whether the EU should permit trade with 264,000 Turkish Cypriots, who live in political isolation and are not permitted to trade freely with the outside world. The European Parliament became part of the decision-making process in 2009 with the Lisbon Treaty, which gives it greater powers.
The debate focused on whether direct trade with Turkish Cypriots is a trade issue, which requires qualified majority voting among EU member states, or a political one, which gives states veto rights. Greek Cypriots have argued that it is political.
“The decision taken by the Legal Affairs Committee will lead to a weird situation in which the European Parliament returns an authority to the [European] Council — maybe for the first time in the institution’s history,” the KKTC presidency also said. “The point to which the European Parliament — which has been in a struggle with the [European] Council over its authority since its foundation — has been brought via pressure by the Greek Cypriot side is thought provoking,” the presidency noted.
“On the other hand, it is not possible to explain this situation only with the Greek Cypriot side’s manner or its attempts,” it said, underlining that the absence of the EU’s will led to rewarding the Greek Cypriot side’s stance preventing the Cyprus solution once more after they had been rewarded via EU entry in 2004 although they said “no” to reunification. Such absence of will encourages the Greek Cypriot side, which already has an irreconcilable attitude at the negotiation table, to be more rigid, it said.
Kurt Lechner, a centre-right German MEP who had written a report on the issue, suggested that using the parliament’s powers over international trade would undermine the sovereignty of Greek Cyprus, www.europeanvoice.com reported.
Nonetheless, Bernhard Rapkay, a centre-left German MEP who chairs the parliament’s group high-level contact for relations with the Turkish Cypriots, called the vote “ridiculous,” the same news portal reported. “I want law to be respected and [the Treaty of] Lisbon gives these issues co-decision and we are agreeing not to use this procedure,” Rapkay was quoted as saying by The European Voice.
Rapkay, meanwhile, appealed to the committee to give members more time to study the opinion by the parliament’s legal service on which Lechner’s report was based, underlining that the opinion had been given to members only on Friday.
21.10.2010 News TODAY’S ZAMAN WITH WIRES -
Turkey stages Cyprus drills amid oil dispute
Archived from Kuwait Times on June 18, 2009
ABOARD THE TCG GEMLIK: Turkish and Turkish Cypriot warships staged search and rescue drills off the island of Cyprus yesterday amid tensions over a disputed search for oil and gas. The frigate Gemlik and other vessels took part in the maneuvers off the northern town of Famagusta, which included extinguishing fire on a ship, rescuing illegal migrants from a sinking rubber boat and rescuing the crew of a sea plane in distress.
Turkish Cypriot military officials denied the maneuvers were a show of force, but it comes amid a rekindled dispute with Greek Cypriots over who is entitled to the island’s potential offshore oil and gas wealth. Cyprus was divided in 1974 when Turkey invaded in response to a coup by supporters of union with Greece. The island has an internationally recognized Greek Cypriot south and a breakaway Turkish Cypriot north where Turkey maintains 35,000 troops.
Turkey does not recognize European Union-member Cyprus as a sovereign country and strongly objects to a Greek Cypriot search for mineral deposits inside the island’s exclusive economic zone. That area covers 51,000 square kilometers of seabed off the island’s southern coast. Turkey has warned Cyprus against pursuing “adventurist policies” and says Turkish Cypriots should also have a say in how the island’s oil-and-gas rights are used.
Cyprus government spokesman Stefanos Stefanou said Tuesday the search for fossil fuels inside the island’s zone remains its sovereign right and it’s protesting the military drills at the UN and EU. But Stefanou said both communities could share in the possible bounty if ongoing reunification talks prove successful. Cyprus President Dimitris Christofias and Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat restarted stalled peace talks last September, but have yet to reach a breakthrough in the slow-moving process.
This is an additional motivating factor … to continue negotiations so that we can reach a just, viable and functional settlement, to reunify our homeland,” Stefanou said.The involvement of a US energy firm Noble Energy, which is set to launch seismic work inside Cyprus’ zone later this year, could further complicate matters for Turkey, a US ally. Cyprus has licensed Noble to search for fossil fuels near two significant gas discoveries in its Israeli offshore blocks. US authorities are siding with the Cypriot government, saying “the involvement of US firms in such investment is a business decision, not a political one.” Cyprus has also signed agreements with Lebanon and Egy
pt to mark out undersea borders to facilitate future oil and gas exploration, prompting Turkey to urge those two countries to scrap the deals.Turkey’s stakes in the dispute are higher as Cyprus has threatened to further impede Turkey’s EU accession negotiations because Turkish warships had interfered with an offshore fossil fuel survey last year. Turkey’s EU membership bid is already hobbled with eight of 35 negotiation chapters frozen over its refusal to open its air and sea ports to Cyprus “Turkey’s policy of solving the problem through use of force has not brought any good to its advantage in the international arena,” said Prof. Yuksel Inan
at International Relations Department of Bilkent University based in Ankara. “Instead, Turkey should seriously think about taking the issue to the Security Council as a temporary member now.” – AP -
Turkey Mulling Oil, Gas Search off North Cyprus
Turkey considering search for oil, gas in waters off Cyprus’ northern coast
The Associated Press
By MENELAOS HADJICOSTIS ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
NICOSIA, Cyprus October 21, 2010 (AP)Turkey is considering starting oil and gas exploration off the northern coast of Cyprus, a senior Turkish Energy Ministry official said Thursday.
The official said initial seismic research conducted in waters between Turkey’s southern Mediterranean port city of Mersin and Cyprus, 200 kilometers (124 miles) away, “has yielded certain data.”
He said Turkey is carrying out further studies on how to proceed with exploration and is looking into possible partnerships with international gas and oil giants.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with Turkish rules that bar state officials from speaking to reporters without prior authorization.
The news came as Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri said his country is finalizing its sea boundaries with Syria to facilitate a search for offshore mineral deposits.
“Now we have a much better relationship with Syria and we are negotiating the economic zone,” Hariri told reporters after talks Thursday with Cyprus President Dimitris Christofias in Nicosia.
Lebanon signed an agreement with Cyprus to mark out sea boundaries in 2007, but ratification by Lebanese legislators has stalled. Hariri referred to “differences” between the two countries, but didn’t elaborate.
Hariri said the agreements with both Cyprus and Syria will be sent to parliament for ratification, “hopefully soon”.
Cyprus signed a similar agreement with Egypt in 2003.
Oil and gas exploration has threatened to increase tensions between rivals Cyprus and Turkey.
Cyprus was divided in 1974 when Turkey invaded after a coup on Cyprus by people who favored uniting the island with Greece. The island has an internationally recognized Greek Cypriot south and a breakaway Turkish Cypriot north, where Turkey keeps 35,000 troops.
Cyprus joined the European Union in 2004, but only Greek Cypriots — who represent the island in the bloc — enjoy the benefits.
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Greek Cyprus complains to EU over Turkey’s ban on ports
The Greek Cypriot administration has complained about Turkey to the European Union for causing financial damage to two Greek Cypriot airline companies and increasing air pollution as a result of its ban on Greek Cypriot aircraft using its airports and airspace.
In a document Greek Cyprus authorities presented to the EU in a meeting of transportation, communication and energy ministers in Brussels on Friday, they lamented that some of their air travel was extended and as a result caused more air pollution.
Some EU member states have blocked several negotiation chapters with Turkey, claiming that Turkey has to live up to its obligations in Ankara protocol to open up its ports and airports to Greek Cypriot vessels and aircrafts. Turkey refuses to lift the ban, saying that the EU should lift the economic isolation on Turkish Cyprus because the country is displaying a political will to reunify the island.
The document said Turkey bans aircrafts from Cyprus Airways and Eurocypria, which are registered in Greek Cyprus, and their travel to Moscow from Larnaka takes 1 hour more and to Helsinki 35 minutes more due to Turkey’s ban.
They also complained that some Greek Cypriot aircraft had to land in Greece en route to Europe and they are negatively affected by strikes in the country. Officials reportedly said Greek Cyprus could still not launch flights to Georgia and Ukraine for this reason and that the overall damage is $5 million annually.
Among the complaints are the facts that Greek Cypriot aircraft had to extend their travel and release more carbon dioxide into the air. They assert that this is not in line with the EU’s climate policies.
16 October 2010, Saturday
TODAY’S ZAMAN İSTANBUL -
What Cyprus tells us about Turkey
By David Kenner
Cypriot President Dimitris Christofias gave Foreign Policy an interview earlier this week, where he offered an eloquent explanation of the factors that have conspired to leave his country his country divided [sic.], even after 36 years of diplomacy. But his answer to why the average U.S. citizen — or even the average diplomat in Foggy Bottom — should care about Cyprus’s plight was rather unsatisfying. “The United States of America is a bastion of freedom and human rights, isn’t it?” he said. “I call upon the Americans to respect the Cypriots as they respect themselves.”
That’s true, of course. Human rights are inalienable and universal, and if the approximately 1 million Cypriots are forced to live in a bifurcated nation, and the quarter million citizens of northern Cyprus exist in a state of international isolation, that’s an issue that deserves our concern. We should also be concerned with the treatment of the Uighur population in China, the work of Cambodia’s international tribunal, and the ongoing chaos in the Congo. In a world of finite resources, however, concern doesn’t necessarily translate into the United States spending time and money to resolve a problem.
However, there is a good reason that the United States should be paying active attention to the progress, or lack thereof, in resolving the Cyprus dispute. It just has less to do with the plight of Cypriots themselves, and more to do with the fate of Christofias’s primary rival: Turkey. The Turkish government, which is increasingly throwing its weight around in the Middle East, still refuses to recognize the Republic of Cyprus or let its vessels dock in Turkish ports. Cyprus, as a full member of the European Union, can be expected to continue to block Turkey’s EU accession bid until a resolution is reached. The fear is that, if Prime Minister Erdogan’s government finds its path blocked to the West, it will increasingly drift into the orbit of Iran and Syria.
Indeed, the lack of progress on the Cyprus issue is just one instance of how Erdogan’s ambitious foreign policy has been unable to resolve issues closer to its borders. While Erdogan travels the globe blasting Israel for its policy toward Gaza or mediating the dispute over Iran’s nuclear program, his diplomats have also made little progress in normalizing relations with Armenia; efforts to resolve the increasingly violent conflict with Turkey’s Kurdish population have also stalled. Issues like Cyprus, Armenia, and Kurdish integration might not command the international spotlight in the same way as Iran and Israel can, but they are arguably more important for Turkey’s long-term well being.
,October 1, 2010