NICOSIA, Cyprus: Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar said Tuesday efforts to resolve Cyprus ethnic division should start fresh and aim to achieve a two-state deal, because decades of negotiations for a federation-based agreement have got nowhere.
Tatar said a regional new state of affairs that takes into account the discovery of significant gas deposits off Cyprus creates the need for a two-state accord, under which equally sovereign Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots can live side by side.
The Greek Cypriots reject the two-state idea.
Tatar spoke after meeting United Nations envoy Jane Holl Lute, who arrived on the island nation to scope out chances of resuming peace talks that have remained dormant since 2017.
U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres said hes willing to host an informal conference bringing together the two sides as well as Cyprus guarantors Greece, Turkey and former colonial ruler Britain in hopes of resuscitating peace talks.
The approach by Tatar, a right-wing…