Eiki Berg
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Compromising with facts, clashing with norms? Revisiting territoriality and sovereignty in Cyprus, Moldova and Bosnia
in Cyprus
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This chapter examines the evolution of peace-making in Cyprus over forty years and shows how the Annan Plan, with its eventual failure, raises questions about the future of peace-making, not just in Cyprus but also elsewhere. It explores the way in which United Nations (UN) evolved from a mediating mission in the 1960s into an attempt at direct arbitration in 2004. The chapter argues that, at the time of the referendum campaign, a deliberate effort was mounted to discredit the UN Secretary-General in southern Cyprus because of the association of his name with the Annan Plan, in order to ensure that the proposed agreement was rejected by the electorate. In a broader context, Annan's decision to develop an arbitration role has thrown up interesting questions regarding the ability of the UN to take a more robust approach towards peacemaking, and indeed the desirability of it doing so.

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Cyprus

A conflict at the crossroads

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