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Barrier dividing Nicosia demolished

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  • Barrier dividing Nicosia demolished

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    Barrier dividing Nicosia demolished
    09.03.2007 17:58 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Greek Cypriots have demolished a key section of the
    barrier dividing the island's capital city, Nicosia. The Green Line
    has separated Cyprus's Greeks from the Turkish population since 1974,
    when Turkish troops occupied the north. The work in Ledra Street began
    under cover of darkness and had not been publicised in advance. But
    the Greek Cypriot authorities say Turkish troops must pull back before
    people can cross in either direction.

    Ledra Street - a pedestrianised shopping area - would be the sixth
    crossing point on the divided island. The street was cordoned off to
    allow heavy equipment and demolition crews to move into position. A
    small crowd watched the action, applauding when work on tearing down
    the barrier began. "This is a show of goodwill on our side to
    contribute positively to opening Ledra Street," government spokesman
    Christodoulos Pashardes told state television.

    It used to be a bustling road in the heart of Nicosia's commercial
    district but for more than 40 years it has been blocked by a large
    wall and a viewing platform overlooking the demilitarised strip
    separating north from south. The structures have been replaced by
    plastic barricades. In December the Turkish Cypriot authorities
    dismantled a controversial footbridge on Ledra Street, which was built
    in 2005. It had angered Greek Cypriots, who said it encroached into
    the UN buffer zone separating the two sides. The Green Zone is policed
    by United Nations troops, amid barbed wire and dilapidated buildings
    with sand bags still sitting in the windows. Cyprus was partitioned
    after a Turkish invasion in 1974, which came shortly after a Greek
    Cypriot coup backed by the military junta ruling Greece at the
    time. Shortly before joining the European Union in 2004 the Greek
    Cypriots rejected a United Nations plan to reunify the island. First
    the disused ordnance and derelict buildings will have to be made safe
    and then UN forces will have to establish a checkpoint to police the
    crossing, reports the BBC.

    Nicosia was the only divided capital city in the world after the fall
    of the Berlin Wall.
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