Thursday, February 10, 2011

Foreign Minister's contacts in Nicosia, London, United Nations

Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas will meet in New York with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon next week, after a visit to Cyprus.
 
Droutsas is due to meet with the UN chief on Friday, Feb. 18, for talks focusing on the Cyprus issue ahead of the submission of the latter's report to the UN Security Council later in the month.
 
Developments in the Cyprus issue -- having as a background the Geneva talks last month -- a slow dialogue process and the imminent report by the UNSG to be submitted in late February will be the main issues in a series of contacts Droutsas will have in Cyprus and New York, foreign ministry spokesman Grigoris Delavekouras said on Thursday, during a regular briefing of reporters.
 
"We want Greece to be able to have its positions expressed clearly in order to be as helpful as possible," he stressed.
 
Droutsas will be in Nicosia on Feb. 14 for meetings with Cypriot President Demetris Christofias and Foreign Minister Markos Kyprianou. The next day will be in London for contacts with his British counterpart and David Miliband, the leader of the opposition. On Friday he will travel to New York, where he will meet with the UN secretary general, Archbishop Demetrios of America and representatives of the Greek-American community.
 
Referring to the meeting with the UN secretary general, Delavekouras stressed that the UN and the international community play a "decisive" role in the Cyprus issue and that the process should be assisted in an objective manner to ensure that the necessary steps will be made.
 
As regards the course of the process, the pace of which is not satisfactory, he said the responsibility lies with the Turkish Cypriot side, which "reverts to older positions". The spokesman also called for "a clear commitment by Turkish Cypriot leader Dervis Eroglu on everything that has already been agreed upon".
 
Finally, he called on the Turkish Cypriot side to "enter negotiations with willingness for progress".
 
 
Source: ANA-MPA