The deal

Published: 14 February 2004 y., Saturday
Leaders of the Turkish and Greek Cypriot communities have accepted a U.N. blueprint for reunifying Cyprus by May. The deal was reached after three days of hard bargaining at U.N. headquarters. The deal reached Friday clears the way for further talks aimed at ending 30 years of Cyprus' division. The goal is to put a final settlement to referenda on both sides of the island, in time for a united Cyprus to join the European Union May 1. Agreement came on the fourth day of three-party talks involving Turkish Cypriot leader Rauf Denktash, Greek Cypriot President Tassos Papadopoulos and U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan. After three days of deadlock, Mr. Annan presented the rival leaders with a take-it-or-leave-it proposal Friday, and both sides immediately accepted. A beaming Mr. Annan announced the result, calling it a very good day for Cyprus. Mr. Annan said the talks will continue February 19 in Cyprus, with his representative, Alvaro de Soto, acting as mediator. If no agreement is reached there, the negotiators would be brought back to New York for a final session that would include the motherlands, Greece and Turkey. If there is still no result, Mr. Annan reserves the right to fill in the blanks on a final document that would be put to a public vote in April.
Šaltinis: voanews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Ukraine dismisses notion of transit camps in the country

Ukraine has no plans to set up transit camps to receive Chechen refugees, the State Committee for Nationalities and Migration has said more »

Belarus may ban EU, US official

Belarus, its leaders shunned by much of the Western world, has snapped back at moves by the European Union and United States to restrict the movements of its senior officials and threatened to respond in kind more »

A Crucial Step

Russian cabinet approves Kyoto Protocol; gives agreement big boost more »

Putin hurts democracy, petition says

The former Czech president, Vaclav Havel, and about 100 other international figures have signed a petition accusing President Vladimir Putin of Russia of using the Beslan hostage drama to undermine democracy more »

Slovenia withdraws support for Croatian EU membership

Slovenia has withdrawn its support for Croatia’s EU membership bid following a border incident on Thursday more »

China, Armenia stress economic and technological cooperation

Top Chinese leaders and visiting Armenian President Robert Kocharyan agreed Tuesday that the two sides should strengthen cooperation in economic, technological and other areas more »

Gyurcsany nominated Hungarian premier

Ferenc Gyurcsany was formally nominated Monday as Hungary's next prime minister by President Ferenc Madl more »

A Support for Croatia's plans

Croatia, Romania and Bulgaria in the EU by 2007: Poland's Kwasniewski more »

Turkey Must Be Allowed Into E.U. - Bulgarian Premier

Denying the Turks accession to the European Union would be "an injustice" since Turkey, as a key member of NATO, has helped ensure European security for the past 50 years more »

BELARUSIAN TV CENSORSHIP

The censors on state-run Belarusian television are banning appeals by opposition candidates for the 17 October parliamentary elections more »