Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus News & Update

Cypro

Contributor
Messages
665
Reactions
3 1,799
Nation of residence
Northern Cyprus
Nation of origin
Northern Cyprus





1642979250405.png

January 23, 2022 Parliamentary Elections ( Last Updated 01:05)

Results announced by the TRNC Higher Electoral Council (YSK)


Registered Voters:
203,792

Attendance: 58.23%

Opened ballot boxes: 650/763

  • NATIONAL UNITY PARTY (UBP) 39.75% SEATS: 24
  • REPUBLICAN TURKISH PARTY (CTP) 31.57% SEATS: 18
  • DEMOCRAT PARTY (DP) 7.59% SEATS: 3
  • COMMUNAL LIBERATION PARTY-NEW FORCES (TKP-YG) 1.54% SEATS:
  • INDEPENDENCE ROAD 1.92% SEATS:
  • REBIRTH PARTY (YDP) 6.64% SEATS: 2
  • PEOPLE’S PARTY (HP) 6.60% SEATS: 3
  • SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC PARTY (TDP) 4.37% SEATS:
 

Anastasius

Contributor
Moderator
Azerbaijan Moderator
Messages
1,415
Reactions
5 3,143
Nation of residence
United States of America
Nation of origin
Azerbaijan

Ryder

Experienced member
Messages
10,857
Reactions
6 18,707
Nation of residence
Australia
Nation of origin
Turkey
Well at least with a face like that no one is going to accuse her of being a Turkified Greek, lol.

Sorry, bad joke.

She looks pretty Asian. You know sometimes I even get called an Asian.

My brother when he was born big time he had Asian looks. My mum told me how Chinese women used to adore my brother due to his Asian looks as a baby and a kid while my mum was basically had European looks while my dad looked Middle Eastern but his heritage mainly comes from Crimean Turks/Tatars.

Gotta love genetics and how the environment plays a role in transforming peoples looks.
 

Cypro

Contributor
Messages
665
Reactions
3 1,799
Nation of residence
Northern Cyprus
Nation of origin
Northern Cyprus
Halil Falyalı killed by gangsters came from Turkey



 

CAN_TR

Contributor
Messages
1,474
Reactions
17 5,211
Nation of residence
Austria
Nation of origin
Turkey
Halil Falyalı killed by gangsters came from Turkey



Sources don‘t mention anything about the killers origin… „kimliği belirsiz kişi veya kişiler“.
 

Ecderha

Experienced member
Messages
4,552
Reactions
4 7,822
Nation of residence
Bulgaria
Nation of origin
Turkey
Sources don‘t mention anything about the killers origin… „kimliği belirsiz kişi veya kişiler“.

It is look like Police have the pictures of possible "assassination team"
 

Cypro

Contributor
Messages
665
Reactions
3 1,799
Nation of residence
Northern Cyprus
Nation of origin
Northern Cyprus
Sources don‘t mention anything about the killers origin… „kimliği belirsiz kişi veya kişiler“.


It is look like Police have the pictures of possible "assassination team"
 

Anastasius

Contributor
Moderator
Azerbaijan Moderator
Messages
1,415
Reactions
5 3,143
Nation of residence
United States of America
Nation of origin
Azerbaijan
I am not up-to-date, could someone give me a quick rundown on what makes Halil Falyali such a significant figure?
 

Cypro

Contributor
Messages
665
Reactions
3 1,799
Nation of residence
Northern Cyprus
Nation of origin
Northern Cyprus
I am not up-to-date, could someone give me a quick rundown on what makes Halil Falyali such a significant figure?
He was the biggest and only Cypriot Mafia boss in TRNC.. Many claims and rumors about him and his fortune have been made.. He was also the biggest investor in the Economy of TRNC mainly in the tourism sector. A couple of months ago he was put in jail and he threatened politicians with releasing of sex tapes unless they release him. He also had connections to AKP, money laundering, drug distribution in the Mediterranean, Turkey.

TRNC had a major "illegal" income from online betting and in recent years he became the sole controller of that money (claim). But that online betting is not illegal in North Cyprus, it is just illegal in the minds of the Turkish mafia and lottery owners. So they were trying to destroy online betting sites in TRNC for a long time.

A lot of stuff and videos about him.. you can find on the internet.. Even the US was after him. Sedat Peker released some videos mentioning him as well
 

Stuka

Contributor
Think Tank Analyst
Messages
713
Reactions
5 4,540
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Turkey
Interesting Revelation


Our View: We’ve admitted the folly of sanctions, but is new approach too late?​


The pursuit of sanctions against Turkey is no longer the priority of the government’s foreign policy. This was made clear both by President Anastasiades and his new foreign minister Ioannis Kasoulides last Sunday. The former made this revelation to journalists after a church service while the latter spoke extensively about the folly of sanctions in a newspaper interview published on the same day.

Although the “sanctions would remain at the technical committee for further processing”, the government will switch its focus to confidence-building measures (CBMs), said Anastasiades, avoiding mentioning the self-evident – these were mutually exclusive policies. You can either work at improving relations through CBMs or at worsening relations by demanding sanctions. Under the circumstances, the continued processing of sanctions by technical committee is for face-saving purposes, the government unwilling to admit defeat in something it had invested so much in the last two-and-a-half years.

Anastasiades’ confidence-building proposals envisage the handing over of the fenced area of Varosha to the UN, opening of Tymbou (Ercan) airport to direct flights under the UN and the opening of Famagusta port to foreign trade, under EU supervision. With direct flights and lifting of the trade embargo the isolation of the Turkish would end. In exchange he had asked for the implementation for the additional Ankara protocol, opening Turkey’s ports to Cyprus-flagged ships and allowing Cyprus planes into Turkish airspace. These proposals were “an indication of a positive step in the efforts we are making to create the suitable and positive climate”, he said.

Kasoulides was more direct in an interview he gave Kathimerini newspaper, admitting the pursuit of sanctions had failed. He said: “The discussion at political level at the Foreign Affairs Council has been exhausted as there are member-states that do not want to impose sanctions on Turkey. They say they consider sanctions counter-productive as they would not make Turkey change stance in Varosha, but what was needed was confidence-building measures.”

For more than two years, the public was being served idea of sanctions by the former foreign minister Nikos Christodoulides, claiming these would be imposed at the next European Council meeting, which never came. His hard line may have helped him build his presidential candidacy, but it did not serve the Greek Cypriots in any way. The pursuit of sanctions was an example of the foreign policy for domestic consumption that he seemed to specialise in while ignoring how it undermined the credibility of the government and its talks’ message abroad.

Who could believe the Cyprus government was sincerely interested in the resumption of the peace process, as it repeated ad nauseam, when its sole foreign policy objective was to punish Turkey for violating the Cypriot EEZ and opening the fenced area of Varosha. Even the violations of the Cypriot EEZ were considered by many countries as an understandable reaction by Turkey to Cyprus’ decision to proceed with its energy plans while attempting to exclude it from the hydrocarbons’ exploitation of the Eastern Mediterranean, through its trilateral alliances and the EastMed pipeline. They condemned the violations of the Cypriot EEZ by Turkey, but at the same time urged talks to ease tensions and resolve the exploration disputes. Events of the last few weeks signalled the demise of Anastasiades’ ambitious energy plans.

The EastMed project that antagonised Turkey will never happen and last Sunday Anastasiades even spoke about Turkey’s participation in the energy planning of the region, in the event of a settlement. In such a case Turkey would have a say and role to play with regard to its participation in the deliberations about the exploitation of the natural wealth, he said. This was not what he and his foreign minister were saying a couple of months ago. The government’s retreat is complete. There could have been no clearer admission that attempting to exclude Turkey from the exploitation of natural gas (the failure of this initiative was confirmed by the warming of relations between Turkey and our energy partner Israel) and then pursuing its punishment was misguided and would cement the dead end we are at.

In his interview in Kathimerini, Kasoulides spoke about the mistaken tactics that left the government’s credibility in tatters. “Without saying someone is to blame, we went through the phase of probable lack of trustworthiness and enter a different orbit that gives me the right to hope of better prospects in the coming weeks or months,” he said in the interview. In his recent trip to Washington, during which he met the Secretary of State Antony Blinken and other top officials of the State Department, Kasoulides said there was a very positive response to the proposal for CBMs and offers of help. There had also been a positive response in Brussels and he plans to give a detailed presentation of the proposal at Monday’s Foreign Affairs Council and at his meeting with the EU’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell.

The abandonment of the Christodoulides policy that took us backwards, for which Anastasiades, as president, was primarily to blame was long overdue. The drastic shift initiated by the pragmatic Kasoulides – and accepted by Anastasiades as the only way out of the dead end he led the country to – was imperative and we can only express the hope that it is not a case of too little, too late.

What do think about this bro @Cypro ? Revelation or Mind Games.
 

what

Experienced member
Moderator
Messages
2,173
Reactions
10 6,424
Nation of residence
Germany
Nation of origin
Turkey
That actually sounds promising if they are sincere.

The EastMed pipeline is dead, EU countries have been way more rational then the western media made us believe and its clear that the EU is not as one-sided as S. Cyprus, Greece and France wanted us to believe.

If we play our cards right, Israeli gas can reach Europe through Turkey and make us even less dependent on gas from Russia or Iran. This is going to be on the agenda when the Israeli PM visits Turkey in March.
 

the

Well-known member
Messages
321
Reactions
756
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Turkey
handing over of the fenced area of Varosha to the UN, opening of Tymbou (Ercan) airport to direct flights under the UN and the opening of Famagusta port to foreign trade, under EU supervision. With direct flights and lifting of the trade embargo the isolation of the Turkish would end. In exchange he had asked for the implementation for the additional Ankara protocol, opening Turkey’s ports to Cyprus-flagged ships and allowing Cyprus planes into Turkish airspace.

This would certainly be politically and economically beneficial to North Cyprus and for what its worth greater connectivity between Cyprus and Turkey will reduce tension and perhaps reduce pressure on Turkey applied by the EU. Although, I'm not entirely convinced handing over Maras to the UN would benefit anyone unless the area could be rebuilt and tourism revenues could somehow be shared between the two nations.

North Cyprus could also benefit from constructing a mini-gas hub connecting to the proposed Israeli pipeline, thus reducing dependency on Turkey for energy and resources and help limit the frequency of power cuts.
 
Last edited:

Heartbang

Experienced member
Messages
2,557
Reactions
8 3,976
Nation of residence
Turkey
Nation of origin
Turkey
Greek Cypriots talking about CBMs while Greece is arming itself to the teeth?
This here, fellas, is a good cop - bad cop play. A lame one at that.
 

Saithan

Experienced member
Denmark Correspondent
Messages
8,634
Reactions
37 19,745
Nation of residence
Denmark
Nation of origin
Turkey
I thikk it’s quite meninful sharing. I just wish that little part southeast east of dhakalia had been taken as well, effectively creating/using UK as a natural border ;)
 

Follow us on social media

Top Bottom