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Cyprus votes for president with eyes on new peace push

Voters in Cyprus headed to the polls Sunday for a presidential election that could determine if the divided island makes another push to reunite after the collapse of talks last year.

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades arrives to cast his vote in the 2018 Cypriot presidential election at a polling station in the coastal city of Limassol on January 28, 2018. Voters in Cyprus headed to the polls Sunday for a presidential election that could determine if the divided island makes another push to reunite after the collapse of talks last year. Amir MAKAR / AFP

Voters in Cyprus headed to the polls Sunday for a presidential election that could determine if the divided island makes another push to reunite after the collapse of talks last year.

After a lacklustre campaign, opinion polls put conservative incumbent Nicos Anastasiades, 71, ahead as he pledges to restart negotiations with the Turkish-backed north quickly after the vote.

The former lawyer under the slogan “Steady Steps Forward” has taken credit for an impressive recovery by the European Union’s most easterly member since a debilitating financial crisis in 2013.

But apathy appears to be growing and Anastasiades seems unlikely to win outright in the first round.

He is expected to face a February 4 run-off against either dovish communist-backed Stavros Malas or Nikolas Papadopoulos, a former president’s son who takes a tougher line on peace efforts.

“The economy is doing reasonably well but for me the main criterion is still the Cyprus problem,” said university lecturer Andres Karageorghis after casting his ballot at a school in Nicosia.

“To carry on and hopefully find a solution.”

If the first round is not decisive there is set to be intense horse-trading, and analysts say a backroom deal between the opponents of Anastasiades could still deny him a second and final five-year term.

Reunification prospects

As always, the nearly 44-year division of the island between the internationally recognised Greek-majority Republic of Cyprus and a Turkish Cypriot statelet in the north looms large.

In July, two years of UN-backed talks between Anastasiades and Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci came closer than ever to reunifying the island but collapsed in acrimony before a deal.

Despite the failure to bridge key issues, including the future of tens of thousands of Turkish troops in the north, Anastasiades insists he wants talks with Akinci to restart soon.

But there is deep scepticism among the international community over whether there is the political will to make a breakthrough.

During the campaign Anastasiades was attacked for being either too pliant or not keen enough to seal a deal.

Retired treasury worker George Georgallides said he voted for more hardline Papadopoulos because he felt “Anastasiades gave up everything” at the negotiations.

“If we do restart talks then it needs to be from the very beginning again,” he said.

Signs are that the road to reunification will only get tougher as fatigue mounts after decades of failure.

For the first time ultra-nationalist party ELAM — fiercely opposed to the proposed reunification — is fielding a candidate.

Economic focus

While the “national problem” is ever present, this time around the economy has been a dominant issue.

When Anastasiades took over, the banking sector was in meltdown and he took a 10-billion-euro (more than $12-billion) bailout that entailed biting austerity measures.

That included a drastic haircut on accounts of over 100,000 euros held in the country’s biggest lender, Bank of Cyprus.Since then the economy has rebounded faster than many expected and growth has been steady since 2015.

Tourism reached a record high last year and explorations are going on for oil and gas offshore. But analysts warn there are major challenges left.The economy is still smaller than it was before the crisis, unemployment is around 11 percent and banks are awash with bad loans.

“The recovery is relative,” said Fiona Mullen, director of Cyprus-based Sapienta Economics.Polls close at 1600 GMT with final results expected late Sunday.

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