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The deal that never was - Cyprus limps into Europe

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  • The deal that never was - Cyprus limps into Europe

    FEATURE: The deal that never was - Cyprus limps into Europe
    By Masis der Parthogh, dpa =

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    April 20, 2005, Wednesday
    05:12:23 Central European Time

    Nicosia (dpa) - Many Cypriots saw their life-long ambition of belonging
    to Europe finally realised on May 1, 2004, when the tiny Mediterranean
    island joined the 25-strong enlarged family that comprised the new
    European Union.

    Despite the pomp and cheer, however, Cyprus has remained isolated
    from the rest of the Union, not least because large bodies of sea
    water separate it from the Old Continent.

    The date of accession came and went with little if any significant
    change in the day-to-day lives of the 800,000 souls "stranded" on
    the island. Being the easternmost fort among the ten new members,
    Cyprus should have kick-started a celebration, but the mood was muted.

    A week earlier, the island's two main communities - the Greek Cypriots
    majority living in the south and the Turkish Cypriots in the north -
    had failed to agree to a United Nations reunification plan to end
    the 30-year divide caused by Turkey's invasion and occupation.

    A successful outcome would have seen both communities signing the
    accession agreement in Athens, evolving into a federal state with equal
    political rights, under one flag, two languages and two religions.

    Instead, activity on both sides has now reached a standstill, where the
    economy was expected to boom and part of the occupied land should have
    been returned to the Greek Cypriot refugees, with other humanitarian
    issues on their way to a resolve.

    As a result, trucks with goods have not rolled to either side,
    services have not boomed and structural aid remains tied in accounts
    in Brussels due to stubbornness from both sides to give in a little.

    The Greek Cypriot President Tassos Papadopoulos, who urged his people
    to outright reject the U.N. agreement in a tear-jerk public appearance,
    has shown little enthusiasm to resume talks on the basis of the Annan
    plan that has been modified five times in as many years.

    The new status of the unrecognised statelet in the north, however,
    has attracted hundreds of thousands of visitors from Cyprus as well
    as foreign tourists, who have so far pumped some 150 million dollars
    to the Turkish Cypriot economy.

    The north's vague legal status has not prevented German and British
    vacationers from spending half as much as they would in the south for
    fish and 'meze tavernas' while spending their reserves in the many
    casinos and gambling houses, mostly operating with Ankara's blessing.

    This is where Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots sit together around
    a roulette table or black jack, as if no conflict had ever divided
    their people.

    Serving them are waitresses from eastern Europe seeking a better
    fortune who have strayed and are often abused by pimps in what amounts
    to white slavery.

    Turkish Cypriot Dervis (pronounced Dair Veesh) and his Armenian friend
    George, both resident in the south and classmates from the century-old
    English School decades before division, want all these to disappear.

    "We want our children and our grandchildren to move freely and become
    friends, as we were some 60 years ago," say the old gentlemen, in
    the old market of the Turkish part of the capital Nicosia.

    Despite all the changes on the Turkish side, however, there is little
    hope of any progress towards reviving the stalled talks, with die-hard
    veterans such as pro-Ankara Rauf Denktash still clinging to power.

    Even U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, whose name adorns the ill-
    fated peace plan, wants a firm commitment from both sides in order
    to return and offer his kind offices for negotiation.

    Elections in the north have seen major upheavals, but they turned
    out to be nothing more than cosmetic.

    The real decision lies in Ankara, where a power struggle between the
    secular generals and Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Islamist society must
    first be fought to see how genuine Turkey is in its wishes to join
    the E.U. in a decade or so from now.

    The nationalists on the Greek Cypriot side, fearful of sharing power
    with whom they call their "Turkish Cypriot brothers", are willing
    to stand this one out, waiting on the sidelines, blaming Turkey's
    intransigence.

    They have convinced their people that Brussels will solve their
    problems from them.

    Whatever the outcome, Dervis and George are patient and happy to have
    finally gained the partial freedom to cross over to each other's side
    and see old friends and revive old memories.

    But their grandchildren do not know if they will live in a unified
    country based on European values. At least not very soon. dpa mdp
    emc ct
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