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News / Nation & World

Europe’s migration deal faces hurdle in Cyprus

Tiny nation says it won’t OK Turkey admission to EU

By MENELAOS HADJICOSTIS and DEREK GATOPOULOS, Associated Press
Published: March 15, 2016, 6:38pm
2 Photos
A migrant carries a baby along a road Tuesday north of Idomeni, Greece, after they were turned back from Macedonia. Hundreds of people walked out of an overcrowded migrant camp Monday on the Greek-Macedonian border, determined to use a dangerous crossing to head north, but they were returned to Greece.
A migrant carries a baby along a road Tuesday north of Idomeni, Greece, after they were turned back from Macedonia. Hundreds of people walked out of an overcrowded migrant camp Monday on the Greek-Macedonian border, determined to use a dangerous crossing to head north, but they were returned to Greece. (VADIM GHIRDA/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

NICOSIA, Cyprus — European Union leaders seek a mutually binding deal with Turkey to stem the flow of migrants by sea to Greece. But several nations stand in the way of such a pact — and tiny Cyprus could pose the greatest diplomatic challenge of all.

Leaders of the EU’s 28 divided nations plan to reconvene in Brussels this week in hopes of ironing out disagreements on a proposed agreement with Turkey. Their tentative agreement struck March 7 would allow Greece to return migrants to Turkey as Europe opens new routes for pre-screened migrants to seek asylum legally.

But Turkey demands big concessions from Europe in return, particularly on its long-held dream of joining the EU, an idea viewed with trepidation by many Europeans. Nowhere does mistrust run higher than in neighboring Cyprus, which has been divided into a Greek Cypriot south and militarized Turkish Cypriot north since 1974.

Cyprus announced Tuesday it has no intention of permitting full negotiations for Turkey’s EU membership — a position that could scuttle the whole deal. Each EU member must consent to any deal.

European Council President Donald Tusk arrived in the Cypriot capital, Nicosia, seeking to soothe government nerves over a proposed package that would include renewed negotiations on Turkish EU membership.

Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades told Tusk his government would not concede on this key point. He called EU pressure seeking Cypriot acquiescence on the matter “unwarranted, counterproductive and not to mention unacceptable.”

Those seeking a deal hope to end the humanitarian crisis on Greece’s closed northern border with non-EU member Macedonia, where hundreds of thousands crossed last year but many thousands today remain stuck, often in squalid camps, their progress north blocked by barbed wire and club-wielding police.

Negotiators fear that permitting another year of poorly controlled mass migration could undermine the EU’s own free movement of citizens and goods and trigger a rise in political extremism already being felt in many countries.

Indeed, diplomats of several EU countries express their own private reservations about Turkey’s ability to deliver its end of the agreement — and question other parts of what the Turks seek in return, particularly visa-free travel for its more than 75 million citizens within the bloc.

Cyprus says it would drop its veto if Turkey granted it diplomatic recognition, a commitment refused despite Cyprus’ international recognition and 2004 admission to the EU. Turkey maintains 35,000 troops in the north, with the island’s capital still divided.

More than 8,500 newcomers sailed last week from Turkey to nearby Greek islands despite the Balkan gridlock.

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