Sunday 22 March 2015

‘Not many chances left,’ says Eide


The UN Secretary General’s Special Adviser  Espen Barth Eide warned on Tuesday that not many chances remained to reunify the island but appeared optimistic that talks between the Greek and Turkish Cypriots side would resume, the Cyprus Mail reports.
“I think people have to realize that we cannot go on year after year without any progress, because this problem has remained unresolved for many decades,” Eide told reporters after a meeting with Anastasiades. “At some stage there must be shared will to move on.”
Eide said he felt the will was there but in addition “there must be the right circumstances and if these circumstances occur we must be ready to grasp the opportunity and use it constructively.”
“There will not be many more chances, let me put it that way,” he said.
Eide said there was a growing sense that the circumstances that led to the suspension of talks may soon be over.
“Expectations are that within reasonable time we will be able to get back to a climate where we can not only talk again but maybe even see if those talks can be accelerated.”
The UN official said he felt there was a wish and desire to invest in this, after the crisis in the winter.
“Sometimes crises can help clarify people’s mind and illustrate that there are bigger issues out there that we have to meet together. So, I am significantly more optimistic than last time you saw me.”
A navigational telex, or NAVTEX, issued by Turkey to announce its intention to carry out seismic surveys expires on April 6, a factor that would contribute constructively to the resumption of talks, Eide said.
It was the second NAVTEX issued by Turkey. The first one, issued in October, expired at the end of the year.
“It seems that a window may be created where the mutual reasons for what has happened over winter are not there and if that momentum occurs we will use it. What we are trying to do now is to talk about what we will do if this is possible. Assuming that we are moving into a better space then we will accelerate talks and try to see how far we can get.”
Turkish Cypriot leader Dervis Eroglu said after his meeting with Eide that he considers it very possible that President Anastasiades will return to the negotiating table soon, even before the upcoming elections in the north, in April.
The Cyprus Mail also reported that Eide left the island on Wednesday and would return when he is ready to announce the resumption of talks, which it is hoped will begin again at the end of April or early May.
Citing sources close to the special envoy, the Cyprus News Agency said Eide hoped to announce a date for the stalled negotiations prior to the elections in the north for a new Turkish Cypriot leader on April 19.
The sources also said there was an agreement in principle from Turkey that it would not renew a navigational telex (NAVTEX) for further explorations in the island’s exclusive economic zone, which expires on April 6.
Negotiations could then resume from the point at which they stopped last October when Turkey issued the first NAVTEX that prompted the Greek Cypriot side to withdraw from the talks.
The sources told CNA that the most difficult issues in the negotiations process would be discussed first this time, however, and not left until last.
Depending on the positions presented by both sides, the United Nations would submit neutral proposals to facilitate convergence between the two sides, the sources said, but they warned it would be difficult for the process to survive yet another interruption.
Eide himself said during a reception at the UN-controlled Nicosia airport yesterday on empowering women, that a resumption of the talks was close.
“We are about to restart the peace talks in earnest. There is will on the top level on both sides,” he added.
“There are serious and deep difficulties on the property issue and on state level issues. However, I have not found a single issue which cannot be resolved.”
Eide urged civil society and ordinary Cypriots on both sides to press their respective leaders to work towards a settlement.
The future of their homeland did not lie just in the hands of their elected leaders, he said, and that people had to encourage and hold their leaders to their promise to deliver a solution.
“The Cyprus problem is not the other side. The problem in Cyprus is the fact that Cyprus is not progressing as it should,” he said, adding that the country as a whole was losing out daily on economic opportunities.

Nami says no new NAVTEX will be issued

Turkish Cypriot daily Kibris reported that the Turkish Cypriot foreign minister Ozdil Nami said that if the Greek Cypriot side continues to put forward preconditions for the resumption of the Cyprus negotiation talks as it had previously done so, then the talks will remain in suspension.
In statements to the paper, Nami noted that the NAVTEX ends on April 6, adding that the Turkish Cypriot side will not announce a new NAVTEX and will not sent the Barbarros to the region.
Nami stated that it will be very pleasant if Mr Anastasiades would return to the table within this period. He recalled that the Greek Cypriot leader, had put forward some preconditions for returning to the table, and warned that if the talks resume in the next three months and the Greek Cypriot side resumes its oil exploration activities, then they will be forced to give the necessary response.
Nami said there were three alternatives - either the sides proceed together on the hydrocarbon issue, or they continue with their activities separately, or simultaneously stop their work.
Moreover, Turkish Cypriot daily Afrika  reported that Eroglu said that the Barbaros has not left Famagusta as a goodwill gesture from the Turkish Cypriot side in order for the talks to be resumed again. He expressed the wish that the Greek Cypriot leader Nikos Anastasiades would return to the negotiating table.

Coffeeshop

Was it a coincidence that last Sunday the pseudo foreign minister of the north Ozdil Nami announced that the navtex for Turkey’s seismic research vessel Barbaros, which expires on April 6, would not be renewed, the Cyprus Mail’s satirical column Coffeeshop asks. Was Turkey so keen on the resumption of the talks that it gave in to Nik’s courageous ultimatum?
As we know only too well, the Turks do not make unilateral concessions. In order not to renew the navtex, they were given assurances from someone that we would stop all exploratory drilling, which was reason the Turks were violating our EEZ. We do not know whether the Yanks arranged for the drilling to stop in consultation with Nik or if it was our prez’s initiative.
Was it another coincidence that the nerdy UN envoy Espen Barth Eide arrived this week to prepare the ground for the resumption of the talks? But it was no coincidence that in the same week we also had the theatre involving Noble, whereby special guests flew in all the way from Texas to take part in it. Two Noble Energy vice presidents flew here all the way from Texas to state the obvious – that they will sell the gas.
The prez pulled off quite a clever stunt to deflect attention away from the fact that we had temporarily given up our sovereign right to carry out drilling in our EEZ so he could triumphantly return to the talks claiming that the Turks had given in to his diktat. This non-commercial exploitation of hydrocarbons is one the few things this government does extremely well, Coffeeshop says.


Sunday 8 March 2015

Ban plan needed, says Davutoglu


Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has urged the United Nations Secretary-General to come up with a plan to solve the Cyprus problem before his term ends in 2016, the Cyprus Mail reports.

Speaking after a meeting with Ban Ki-moon in New York on Thursday, Davutoglu said he had reminded the UNSG that the Turkish side had supported the Annan plan in 2004, which was rejected by the Greek Cypriot side.

“In 2004 we supported the Annan plan and I suggested to Mr Ban Ki-moon that we now need a Ban Ki-moon plan before the end of his term to end this long-standing crisis,” he said.

The Turkish PM also called on the Greek Cypriot side to return to the negotiating table, and for an international conference to be held as soon as possible.

“Instead of one-sided actions and provocations about natural resources in Cyprus, negotiation at the table will be more beneficial. We will do everything possible for a sustainable comprehensive peace,” he said.

The UN said Ban’s special adviser Espen Barth Eide continued his consultations.
“When he is ready to unveil something, it will be unveiled, but obviously Cyprus remains very high on the agenda for the Secretary-General” the UNSG’s spokesperson said.


The spirit of Makarios in Anastasiades

Loucas Charalambous writing in the Cyprus Mail says he is amused by the foolish arguments used by our politicians and journalists when they accuse the British, the Americans, EU and UN officials, of double standards when they don’t support our side, which is always in the right, and sit Turkey, which is always in the wrong, in the dock.

The nonsensical comments made by President Anastasiades on his Moscow trip combined with the US and British reaction gave this bunch the excuse to bombard us with their anti-American and anti-West sloganeering, he says.
This attitude explains how and why we are in the current mess. It is a sick mentality that is based on our political mythology of the last 50-plus years which maintains that for everything that has happened to this country the Turks and the West are to blame, never us. We are completely blameless, the only ones without sin, while the whole world has been constantly conspiring to destroy us.
He says we can accept all this rubbish when it comes from AKEL, DIKO and EDEK and the rest of our political scoundrels who remain stuck in the Makarios political culture, but when we hear it from the mouths of Anastasiades and Foreign Minister Ioannis Kasoulides, two men from DISY, the party set up some 40 years ago with the aim of fighting this sick political culture, destroying the myths, speaking honestly to people, modernising our primitive political attitudes, we can only despair.
Both told us that the behaviour of the Western countries was hypocritical and Pharisaic because they did not condemn Turkey for its ‘invasion’ of the Cypriot EEZ whereas they wanted to crush President Putin over the Ukraine. Both are outraged when they are told that the two cases are very different. But they are.
Our politicians, including Anastasiades and Kasoulides, pretend they do not know the Cyprus problem. Turkey does not recognise the Republic and that is the problem. Turkey’s position – much as we do not like it – is generally accepted by foreign countries and is along the following lines: The Greek Cypriots destroyed the partnership state of 1960, Turkish Cypriots have not been participating in it since 1964, they have set up on their own and therefore the Greek Cypriots represent only half of Cyprus; Greek Cypriots were not committed to a settlement that would lead to the establishment of a new partnership state, in contrast to the Turkish Cypriot who proved they were. For as long as this situation continues we will look after the rights of the Turkish Cypriots and will not allow the Greek Cypriots to usurp them.
This is the argument Turkey uses to justify its incursions into the Cypriot EEZ from which we want the Americans and the British to kick her out. It is also the reason we are told that the two cases are not the same. It is understandable that Turkey’s actions infuriate the Greek Cypriots who have been inculcated with the mythology about the “Turkish Cypriot rebellion”, the evil US, back-stabbing Britain, nasty NATO, the hypocritical EU and virtuous, principled Russia by our political demagogues.
Anastasiades and Kasoulides, after all these years, are emulating Makarios who thought he could play games in the ring in which the two world superpowers were sparring, with result that they crushed us. After all these years and with the benefit of hindsight, we have learnt nothing from these criminal mistakes.
Neither Anastasiades nor Kasoulides – not to mention the other political dwarfs – have understood what our problem is. They continue the demagoguery and the frivolous political games instead of concentrating on finding a solution to the problem and explaining to people why it is necessary and the risks of leaving it unsolved, he concludes.

Coffeeshop

The Cyprus Mail’s satirical column Coffeeshop says that the Mayor of Kyrenia Glafcos Kariolou, who was recently visiting Brussels, went out to dinner with a group of Cypriot and Greek MEPs.
Kariolou, formerly a bash patriot, lost membership to this exclusive club after suggesting that Greek Cypriots should return to their homes in Kyrenia under Turkish Cypriot administration.
While the group were chatting about his suggestion over dinner, Sigmalive’s bash-patriotic columnist and MEP aide, the colossally self-regarding Yiannos Charalambides entered the restaurant with a companion and sat down at a table nearby. When Charalambides saw that Kariolou was among the company, he banged his hands on the table and said: “Traitors, your are eating with this traitor,” and pointed to the Kyrenia mayor.
The MEPs ignored him and a couple of minutes later, he banged his hands on the table again and loudly announced, “My family does not forgive such traitors,” before getting up and leaving the restaurant. Interestingly, among the traitors having dinner with Kariolou was our freedom-fighter MEP Dr Eleni Theocharous, whose parliamentary aide, Dr Charalambides happens to be.

Dr Charalambides was not drunk at the time. We were informed that his outburst was perfectly normal behaviour for him, Coffeeshop concludes.