Cyprus talks can only resume on a two-state basis Erdogan says
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Turkish president reiterates Ankaraâs support for self-declared TRNC in speech delivered on anniversary of 1974 invasion.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said peace talks on the future of Cyprus can take place only between âthe two statesâ on the divided Mediterranean island.
In a speech delivered on Tuesday in the divided Cypriot capital of Nicosia, Erdogan reiterated Ankaraâs support for the self-declared Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) amid a dispute that is damaging Turkeyâs relations with the European Union and Greece.
âThe new negotiation process can only be carried out between the two states. We are right and we will defend our right to the end,â he said.
Greek Cypriots, who represent the island internationally and are backed by the European Union, reject a two-state deal which would imply a sovereign status to a breakaway state they view as illegal.
Turkey is the only country in the world to now recognise the TRNC and keeps 35,000 troops there.
Erdoganâs remarks came as the TRNC marked the 47th anniversary of a Turkish invasion that split the island in two.
Decked out in red and white Turkish and Turkish Cypriot flags, the celebratory mood in north Nicosia stood in stark contrast with the sombre mood in the south, where Greek Cypriots were woken by air raid sirens marking the day Turkish forces landed nearly half a century ago.
The 1974 Turkish invasion came five days after a Greek Cypriot coup engineered by the military government then ruling Greece.
Decades of disagreementFor decades, the United Nations has been attempting to piece Cyprus back together as a two-zone federation â" the only thing the two sides had, until recently, been able to agree to in principle.
But in April, the world body failed to bridge disagreements over restarting peace talks, which collapsed in acrimony in 2017.
The simmering dispute has come into sharper focus in recent years because of competing claims over offshore energy reserves, and a recent reopening by Turkish Cypriots of part of Varosha, a ghost resort that was the hub of Cyprusâs tourism industry prior to 1974.
Erdogan was expected to visit Varosha later on Tuesday as part of his two-day official visit to the TNRC.
Turkish Cypriot officials on Tuesday announced plans for the potential resettlement of Varosha, a move too also likely to infuriate Greek Cypriots as essentially staking ownership over an area the United Nations says should be placed under the control of peacekeepers.
Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar said his administration would scrap the military status of about 3.5 percent of Varosha and allow beneficiaries to apply to a commission mandated to offer compensation or restitution of properties.
On Monday, Erdogan said that a âpermanent and sustainable solutionâ to the islandâs division âcan only be possibleâ by taking into account that there are âtwo separate states and two separate peopleâ.
âThe international community will sooner or later accept this reality,â Erdogan told Turkish Cypriot lawmakers in Cyprusâs breakaway north, adding that Ankara would build a new government complex to symbolise the state of northern Cyprus.
Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades said Erdoganâs remarks were âan expected repeat of Turkeyâs unacceptable positionsâ.
The EU has also ruled out a two-state deal.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in Nicosia earlier this month that the 27 member-bloc, which Cyprus joined in 2004, would ânever, everâ accept such an arrangement.
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