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Cyprus talks: Turkish troops will remain on island, vows Erdoğan
President says Turkish troops will be on island in perpetuity and proposed terms of rotating presidency are unacceptable
The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, appears to have thrown an obstacle in the path to a Cyprus peace settlement, saying Turkish troops will be on the island in perpetuity.
Speaking after talks in Geneva were adjourned, Erdoğan also said on Friday that the envisaged terms of a rotating presidency for a unified island were unacceptable. The terms were a cornerstone of planned new governance arrangements.
The remarks, taken at face value, suggest UN peace efforts have probably not got as close to a deal as the UN sought to suggest at the end of the four days of talks on Thursday.
The conference ended with an agreement that officials would restart detailed talks on 18 January. No date was set for a further meeting at the political level.
Fear and loathing in Nicosia: will peace talks unify Europe's last divided capital?
Read more
A peace settlement for the island, divided since 1974, would need a new form of security guarantee, and Greek Cypriots are demanding a timetable for the removal of 30,000 Turkish troops.
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Originally posted by Azad
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President says Turkish troops will be on island in perpetuity and proposed terms of rotating presidency are unacceptable
The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, appears to have thrown an obstacle in the path to a Cyprus peace settlement, saying Turkish troops will be on the island in perpetuity.
Speaking after talks in Geneva were adjourned, Erdoğan also said on Friday that the envisaged terms of a rotating presidency for a unified island were unacceptable. The terms were a cornerstone of planned new governance arrangements.
The remarks, taken at face value, suggest UN peace efforts have probably not got as close to a deal as the UN sought to suggest at the end of the four days of talks on Thursday.
The conference ended with an agreement that officials would restart detailed talks on 18 January. No date was set for a further meeting at the political level.
Fear and loathing in Nicosia: will peace talks unify Europe's last divided capital?
Read more
A peace settlement for the island, divided since 1974, would need a new form of security guarantee, and Greek Cypriots are demanding a timetable for the removal of 30,000 Turkish troops.
......
.
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