Latest Cyprus Peace Talks Called Off
Talks to reunify ethnically split Cyprus have suffered another blow after the leader of breakaway Turkish Cypriots backed out of a scheduled meeting aiming to push forward negotiations, officials have said.
Cyprus was split in 1974 when Turkey invaded after a coup by supporters of union with Greece.
Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades expressed regret that Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci told United Nations officials that he will not attend the meeting on Thursday.
Mr Anastasiades said:
"I'm ready to continue negotiations at any time."
More than 35,000 troops are stationed in the island's north where Turkish Cypriots have declared a breakaway state recognised only by Turkey.
A 100-mile buffer zone between the Greek and Turkish Cyprus is patrolled by UN peacekeeping troops, many of them British.
The UK still has almost 100 square miles of sovereign territory on Cyprus for two military bases which could form part of any negotiations.
Although both sides insist that talks have not collapsed, the latest setback further erodes confidence in the 22-month peace process to reunify the island as a federation.
Mr Akinci pulled out amid Turkish Cypriot anger over recently-approved legislation that made the commemoration of a 1950 vote for Cyprus's union with Greece mandatory in Greek Cypriot schools.
Mr Akinci insists that Mr Anastasiades must take steps to rescind the legislation before talks can proceed.
Turkish Cypriots see a drive by the majority Greek Cypriots for union with Greece as the root of all the island's ills.
Mr Anastasiades said it was a mistake to pass the legislation at a time when peace talks are at their most sensitive and because the drive for union with Greece is already celebrated as a public holiday on its April 1 anniversary.
But he lamented that the talks were being jeopardised by a "minor, insignificant issue".
Greek Cypriot political parties said in a joint statement that the legislation in no way reflected a shift away from the stated goal of a federated Cyprus.
Cyprus government spokesman Nicos Christodoulides said Turkey is stalling because its demand to keep military intervention rights and troops on the island after reunification is falling on deaf ears.
MORE: "No Realistic Chance" For Cyprus Reunification Before April