kayhan.ir

News ID: 84845
Publish Date : 15 November 2020 - 21:26

Erdogan Visits Northern Cyprus, Calls for Two-State Solution

ISTANBUL (Dispatches) – Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan called for an equal "two-state” solution in Cyprus during a visit on Sunday to the breakaway Turkish Cypriot north of the island, drawing a rebuke from the government in the south.
Erdogan also said Turkey and Northern Cyprus would no longer tolerate what he called "diplomacy games” in an international dispute over rights to offshore resources in the Eastern Mediterranean.
Cyprus has been split along ethnic lines since a Turkish invasion in 1974 triggered by a brief Greek-inspired coup. Ankara recognizes Northern Cyprus as an independent state and it has no diplomatic relations with the government of Cyprus.
"Our priority is to ensure a fair, lasting and sustainable solution” in Cyprus that ensures Turkish Cypriots have security and legal rights, Erdogan told an audience after his arrival.
"A two-state solution must be negotiated on the basis of sovereign equality,” he added.
United Nations-mediated talks on Cyprus broke down in 2017.
Erdogan was visiting Northern Cyprus after Ersin Tatar, who also supports a two-state solution, won last month’s presidential election. Tatar’s predecessor had backed reunification of the island.
Cyprus called Erdogan’s visit "provocative and illegal”.
"Ankara has absolutely no respect for international law, European principles and values, and its obligations towards the EU,” the Cypriot presidency said in a statement.
Erdogan later visited Varosha, a beach town that has been fenced-off and abandoned in no-man’s land since 1974.
Ankara backed the partial re-opening of Varosha just before last month’s election in a move criticized by the United States, Greece and Greek Cypriots.
Erdogan alluded to Turkey’s dispute with EU members Greece and Cyprus and with other neighbors over territorial waters in the eastern Mediterranean.
The EU has threatened to impose sanctions on Turkey next month over illegal exploration at sea.
"Neither we nor Northern Cyprus can tolerate diplomacy games (in the region) anymore,” Erdogan said.
He added that Tatar would soon visit Azerbaijan - which does not recognize Northern Cyprus - to "make the situation better”, without elaborating.
Tatar backed Erdogan’s calls for a two-state solution and offshore rights.