Christofias refuses to go to UN unless deal reached
Negotiations to end Cyprus' division are proceeding poorly, the south's president has said, noting that if no agreement is reached soon, there would be no reason to convene for special upcoming talks in New York. "[Turkish Cypriot President Dervis] Eroğlu says, ‘Mr. Christofias wants Morphou and Karpas [in the north],' while the Annan Plan says Morphou should to be given to us. We hope Turkey will give a green light to a solution. The key to the problem is in Ankara," Christofias told daily Hurriyet in a recent interview. "If we can't make progress at all in the last two meetings, then there really would be no point in going to the meeting in New York that will be held at the end of the month," he said, referring to special, U.N.-sponsored talks. Christofias and Eroglu met yesterday in Nicosia as a part of ongoing peace talks. Noting that Eroglu and Christofias had reached consensus on some key issues, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's special adviser for Cyprus, Alexander Downer, said differences of opinion persisted on management and power-sharing, property and land and citizenship issues. Christofias said he was eager to meet with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the matter. Turkish Cyprus, however, condemned the statement yesterday, saying Christofias should be addressing Eroglu, not Erdogan. "He should not exceed his authority in his statements," Turkish Cyprus Prime Minister Irsen Kucuk said yesterday. Kucuk said Eroglu and Christofias were already holding meetings over the Cyprus issue, Anatolia news agency reported. Kucuk also accused Christofias of being insincere during the peace talks. Meanwhile, Christofias called on Turkey not to call the Greek side of the island a "half country" in reference to Turkish President Abdullah Gul's statement in November 2011 about the prospect of Greek Cyprus taking over the European Union presidency this year as a "half country" leading a "miserable union."
"It is very insulting to say this to an EU member country, especially [when taking into account the fact that] we are in favor of Turkey's membership in the EU. This attitude does not demonstrate respect," said Christofias. Other EU countries do not support Turkey's attitude either, he added. Powerful actors in the EU would still have problems with Ankara joining the union even without the Cyprus problem, Christofias said. Some of these countries are worried about Turkey's domestic problems, economy and population, whereas others are against Turkey's membership because it is a Muslim country, said Christofias, but added that he did not agree with the second reason. Christofias also said natural gas would begin flowing to the island within four years. Turkey and Greece have special rights according to 1960 agreements, he said, noting that the gas would benefit everyone if an agreement were reached. He also called on Greece and Turkey to recognize Cyprus as a sovereign state, to contribute to a solution and to leave the island alone. Meanwhile, Northern Cyprus Foreign Minister Huseyin Ozgurgun said the Greek Cypriots intended to pursue the island's indivisibility, not a permanent consensus. Releasing a statement yesterday, Ozgurgun said the Greek Cypriot administration had insisted on slandering the Turkish Cypriot side instead of trying to reach a consensus.