Cyprus talks to resume on May 15, UN envoy says

Leaders of ethnically split Cyprus agreed on Monday to restart peace talks on May 15, a UN envoy said on Monday, offering fresh hope of healing one of Europe's most enduring frozen conflicts.

Espen Barth Eide was speaking to media after a meeting between Greek Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades and Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci. It was their first encounter since Akinci, a moderate leftist, swept to victory in a Turkish Cypriot leadership election on April 26.

"They agreed it was important to use the momentum created and opportunity to move forward without delay," Eide told journalists outside a landmark hotel straddling a 'buffer zone' that has split the capital Nicosia for decades.

Once catering to Hollywood royalty, the Ledra Palace Hotel is now a shabby shadow of its former self, and is used as living quarters for British peacekeepers.

The division of Cyprus has defied attempts by generations of diplomats to find a settlement. The east Mediterranean island has been divided since the Turkish army invaded in 1974 in response to a brief Greek-inspired coup aimed at union with Greece.

The seeds of division had been sown at least a decade earlier, when power-sharing crumbled into violence just three years after independence from Britain.

Eide said the two leaders had agreed to meet on May 15 to have a "general exchange of views" and discuss the modalities and structure of negotiations.

"This is a unique opportunity, an opportunity to be grasped," said Eide, a former Norwegian foreign minister.

Both sides officially agree in principle that the island should be united under a two-state federal umbrella, but past negotiations have foundered on issues such as the powers of a central government and the...

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