Cyprus: Rival leaders agree to open crossings after containing COVID-19

Share:

Rival Cypriot leaders agreed Thursday to gradually reopen crossing points along the island’s UN-patrolled ceasefire line from June 8 after successfully containing coronavirus outbreaks on both sides, officials said.

File photo: Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades (L) and Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci sit in a cafe in the old city of the divided capital, Nicosia on May 23, 2015 (AFP Photo/Stavros Ioannides)

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades said he had contacted Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci on his own initiative to discuss reopening the crossings.

“The two men came to a mutual understanding to allow crossings (to open) where vehicles are allowed to pass from June 8,” Cyprus government spokesman Kyriacos Koushos said in a statement.

Among those who will be able to cross from the breakaway north of the island are 1,525 Turkish Cypriot construction labourers who work in the Greek Cypriot-controlled south.

They have staged demonstrations against authorities in the north for not allowing them to go back to work when construction sites in the south opened on May 4.

Turkish Cypriot students, those receiving cancer treatment and attending hospital appointments will also be allowed to cross.

Turkish Cypriot pupils will be able to enter on foot via divided capital Nicosia’s Ledra Palace crossing, with buses on hand to ferry them to their schools.

The Mediterranean island is divided between areas controlled by the Republic of Cyprus — a European Union member state — and the breakaway Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, recognised only by Ankara.

The Republic of Cyprus shut four of the eight crossings between the two sides in late February for the first time since they were opened in 2003.

The remaining crossings were closed after the north reported its first case of coronavirus on March 10.

Koushos said Thursday the Republic of Cyprus would carry out “random checks on people who pass through crossing points”.

He said the leaders had also agreed to convene a bi-communal health committee to discuss a gradual lifting of border restrictions at crossing points based on epidemiological data.

Turkish Cypriot health authorities have not reported any new COVID-19 infections since April, they have a total of 108 cases and four deaths.

The Republic of Cyprus eased lockdown measures on Thursday after keeping new daily infections in single figures.

Total COVID-19 cases in the Republic have reached 923 and 17 deaths.

UN-brokered reunification talks between Anastasiades and Akinci have been suspended since July 2017.

(AFP/FRANCE24)

Share: