Cyprus re-unification talks begin

Cyprus re-unification talks begin

Re-unification talks between the Turkish-held Northern Cyprus and the Greek-dominated Republic of Cyprus in the south have recommenced after a two month hiatus.

Demetris Christofias, the Greek Cypriot leader, and Dervis Eroglu, the recently elected Turkish Cypriot leader, met on Wednesday at a United Nations compound in Nicosia which straddles the buffer zone between the island's two populations.
"There is no doubt that a Cyprus solution is doable," Alexander Downer, the UN envoy for Cyprus who facilities negotiations, said.
Turkish troops invaded Cyprus's north in 1974 after a brief Greek Cypriot coup engineered by Greece's former military government.
Currently, the two populations each govern a portion of the island. The goal of peace talks is to re-link the island as a federation.
"To achieve an agreement will require a great deal of political strength, courage and will by both sides," Downer said.
A deal "is not beyond their grasp, it is within their reach."
Crucial talks
Jacky Rowland, Al Jazeera's correspondent reporting from the meeting, was less optimistic.
"In the past, the Greek Cypriot leader held 71 meetings with the Turkish Cypriot leader and they were unable to clinch a deal," Rowland said at the beginning of the latest talks.
A deal in Cyprus is crucial for Turkish efforts to join the European Union.
"The Greek Cypriot side is already a member of the EU and current members can veto new members," our correspondent said.
Greek Cypriots say Turkey cannot join the EU without a re-unification deal on the island.
Presently, Turkey is the only country to recognize the Turkish enclave on the island's north as a separate state.
There are still around 30,000 Turkish troops on the island.
Property issue
The issue of property will be crucial in negotiations.
The election of Eroglu, unseating Mehmet Ali Talat as Turkish Cypriot leader who was seen as a moderate, unnerved some Greek Cypriots.
Eroglu, a nationalist Turkish Cypriot leader, advocates greater independence for his community. Greek Cypriots want a single state with two self-administering areas.
PHOTO CAPTION
Cyprus President Dimitris Christofias, left, Turkish Cypriot leader Dervis Eroglu, right, as United Nations Envoy Alexander Downer talk before their dinner at a restaurant inside the U.N.-controlled buffer zone in the divided capital, Nicosia, Cyprus, Tuesday, May 25, 2010.
Al-Jazeera

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