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AKEL’s Stefanou warns against reopening agreed Cyprus problem framework

In-Cyprus · 2026-06-28

AI SUMMARY

• What happened: AKEL Secretary-General Stefanos Stefanou warned against reopening discussions on previously agreed aspects of the Cyprus problem, emphasizing that such proposals could complicate negotiations and create new deadlocks. • Why it matters: Stefanou's comments come as the UN Secretary-General considers convening an informal meeting to address the Cyprus issue, highlighting the importance of preserving past agreements and focusing on remaining unresolved matters. • What to watch next: Observers should monitor the UN's actions regarding the Cyprus problem and any potential negotiations that may arise, particularly in light of Stefanou's outlined conditions for moving forward.

Politics akelCyprus problemTop News AKEL’s Stefanou warns against reopening agreed Cyprus problem framework Stefanos Stefanou Relevant News Lionel Messi makes more World Cup history as Argentina beat Jordan 28 June 2026 Police arrest 10 in overnight Cyprus operations as hundreds of drivers are checked 28 June 2026 AKEL’s Stefanou warns against reopening agreed Cyprus problem framework 28 June 2026 newsroom 28 June 2026 FacebookXWhatsAppEmailPrintViber AKEL has warned against proposals that would introduce new ideas on agreed aspects of the Cyprus problem, including changing the system of government from presidential to parliamentary and altering the structure of the federation, as the UN Secretary-General explores the possibility of convening an informal expanded meeting to break the deadlock. In an opinion piece published in Phileleftheros today, AKEL Secretary-General Stefanos Stefanou said such discussions were unnecessary and would complicate matters further, creating new deadlocks. The competencies defining the character and content of the federation were already agreed, he said, as was the system of government, which the Greek Cypriot side had supported and ultimately agreed upon after serious deliberation. “Any discussion on this will not help,” he wrote. “On the contrary, it will complicate matters and cause new problems.” Stefanou set out four conditions he said the Greek Cypriot side must meet as potential developments in the Cyprus problem unfold. First, negotiations must resume from where they left off in 2017 and the convergences reached must be preserved. Second, the UN should formally record those convergences so that both sides know precisely what has been agreed and what issues remain open — a practice successfully applied in 2013 by then-UN envoy Alexander Downer. Third, any logic introducing new ideas on agreed issues must be rejected outright. Fourth, the remaining issues to be discussed and agreed were very few — primarily property matters and questions relating to transitional arrangements and the implementation of a solution. On the guarantee system, Stefanou said the UN Secretary-General’s position was clear: abolish the system of guarantees and replace it with an implementation mechanism, withdraw occupation troops within a short timeframe, and eliminate any right of unilateral intervention. He said that at Crans-Montana, convergence had been reached on terminating the Treaty of Guarantee and on the withdrawal of occupation troops, provided the four internal issues of the Guterres framework were resolved. “The insistence of some on sounding out the retention of the guarantee system, with NATO involvement no less, diverts us from the position for termination of the guarantee system and makes it even worse,” he wrote. Stefanou welcomed the UN Secretary-General’s initiative, describing it as positive even though it came only months before the end of Guterres’s term. Guterres had said Cyprus was one mile from a solution at Crans-Montana, Stefanou noted, and would not want that distance to grow through the reopening or cancellation of convergences. It was Guterres’s wish, he said, to present an outline of positions to serve as a general framework for negotiations, with his personal envoy Holguin tasked with conducting contacts primarily across the Nicosia-Athens-Ankara triangle. AKEL’s position, Stefanou said, was that if the genuine political will of all parties was to break the deadlock and achieve a solution, the most direct and effective path was to protect what had been achieved and focus on what remained to be discussed and agreed. “A roadmap with this philosophy would be extremely useful in the effort for a swift and positive outcome,” he concluded. Subscribe to our Newsletter Latest News Lionel Messi makes more World Cup history as Argentina beat Jordan Police arrest 10 in overnight Cyprus operations as hundreds of drivers are checked Temperatures to hit 38 C in Cyprus as heat persists into next week War was “lost from the start” for US and Israel, professor says Police investigations into Sizopoulos and Fedonos cases reach final stage Cyprus presidential election race takes shape as parties and alliances prepare manoeuvres Neon Mall: A new hub of development, commerce and entertainment in Paphos Follow en.philenews on Google News and be the first to know all the news about Cyprus and the world.

Source: In-Cyprus
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