Cypriots demolish wall in divided capital

Greek Cypriots demolished a wall along the boundary that splits Europe's last divided capital, Nicosia, early today.

Greek Cypriots demolished a wall along the boundary that splits Europe's last divided capital, Nicosia, early today.

"Tonight, we demolished a checkpoint on our side," Cypriot president Tassos Papadopoulos told reporters in Brussels. "Now we will see whether Turkey's troops will withdraw so that the passage will be opened or not."

Greek Cypriot military personnel supervise heavy machinery as they dismantle of part of the Green Line barrier in Ledra Street in Nicosia
Greek Cypriot military personnel supervise heavy machinery as they dismantle of part of the Green Line barrier in Ledra Street in Nicosia

A bulldozer began dismantling the wall last night in an unannounced move Mr Papadopoulos said had been planned for more than 15 days. Dozens of people watched as two bulldozers went to work behind a screen.

"This is a first positive step as a sign of goodwill on behalf of our side," government spokesman Christodoulos Pashiardis said.

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Earlier this year, Turkish Cypriots dismantled a footbridge in the area, angering Greek Cypriots and frustrating plans for a new crossing in the heart of the island capital.

Construction of the bridge in late 2005 prompted Greek Cypriots to withdraw support for plans to reopen Ledras Street as an avenue cutting across the buffer zone that has separated the island since the Turkish invasion in 1974.

The wall cuts across Ledra Street just ahead of the buffer zone that divides the two sides.

Running through the heart of the city's tourist area, the street is seen as the strongest symbol of the island's 32-year partition.

Cyprus remains divided into a Greek Cypriot south - representing the internationally recognised government - and Turkish Cypriot north, where Turkey maintains some 40,000 troops.

Efforts to reunify the island have been effectively frozen since 2004, when Greek Cypriots rejected a United Nations reunification blueprint accepted by Turkish Cypriots in a referendum. Although five crossings have functioned on the island since 2003, there are none in the city centre.

AP