The leaders of both sides of the divided Mediterranean island of Cyprus attended an informal dinner on 15 October hosted by Antonio Guterres, the secretary-general of the United Nations. Due to the extent of their disagreement, there was no formal agenda. As expected, no breakthrough emerged, including over any route toward starting a fuller discussion process, although some issues were addressed.
However, getting Cyprus’ President Nicos Christodoulidis and President Ersin Tatar of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) together was a positive step in itself. The UN said both presidents agreed to have another meeting in a broader format in the near future, under the auspices of the secretary-general, to discuss the way forward. They also agreed to meet and explore the possibility of opening new border crossings in addition to the existing eight.
Bitter, long-standing dispute
The division of Cyprus is some way down the international agenda, with Israel waging war in Gaza and Lebanon and Russia and Ukraine locked in conflict. The island is at peace, with no fighting since 1974. But the dispute between its north and south remains bitter and has deep roots, going back to the 1950s. The UN has kept a close eye ever since.
The Republic of Cyprus was established in 1960, with Greek and Turkish Cypriots as co-founders and Turkey, Greece, and the UK as guarantors. Soon after, inter-communal fighting broke out as Greek Cypriots pursued union with Greece—a political concept known as Enosis—and waged war against Turkish Cypriots who opposed it. In 1974, following a coup d’etat instigated by the military junta in Greece, Turkish troops landed on the island under the terms of the Guarantee Agreement. Since then, Turkish and Greek Cypriots have been living in different parts of the island, with the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus recognised as a full nation only by Turkey.
Read more: A tale of one city and two capitals shows Cyprus’s division
Reconciliation attempts
Over the last 50 years, there have been several attempts to reconcile between Greeks and Turks. The closest they came to an agreement was in 2004, when the UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s plan, based on a bi-zonal and bi-communal state, was put to referendum on both sides of the Island.
Turkish Cypriots voted in favour, and Greek Cypriots rejected it, so the plan collapsed. The most recent attempt to reach an agreement came in 2017 in Crans Montana Switzerland. It also failed.