UN May Put Cyprus Peace Plan Forward This Year, Cypriot President Says

NICOSIA, May 13 (Reuters) – The United Nations ⁠is ⁠likely to launch a ⁠fresh push to resolve the decades-old split of ​Cyprus before the term of Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expires at the end ‌of the year, Cyprus’s President ‌Nikos Christodoulides said.

Christodoulides, who represents the Greek Cypriots in ⁠talks with ⁠Turkish Cypriots, made the comments in an interview on Tuesday ​night with Cyprus’s Alpha TV.

• Christodoulides told the channel he had been informed that Guterres was encouraged by discussions he had ​had with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan in March.

• “We might be close ⁠to ⁠developments, which may lead ⁠to ​a peace plan,” Christodoulides said.

• Cyprus was divided in 1974 after Turkey ​invaded parts of ⁠the island’s north following a Greek-backed coup.

• Seeds of division were sown shortly after independence from Britain in 1960, when a power-sharing administration of Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots collapsed amid violence.

• ⁠Greek Cypriots run Cyprus’s internationally recognised government in the south with ⁠Turkish Cypriots administering the north and a UN-patrolled buffer zone between them.

• The last meaningful negotiations on Cyprus collapsed in 2017 amid disagreements on whether Turkey should have a role in a future federated Cyprus with two self-governing regions linked by a strong central government.

• In 2004, Greek Cypriots rejected a United Nations peace plan, saying it did not ⁠address security concerns and the long-term viability of the proposed reunified state, or the property rights of tens of thousands of internally displaced people.

• Turkish Cypriots, whose breakaway state is ​recognised only by Ankara, accepted the proposal.

(Writing by Michele ​Kambas; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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