Turkey says Cyprus ‘ghost town’ to be opened

Kudret Ozersay, the foreign minister of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, center, speaks to Turkey’s Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, left, during a visit to the uninhabited Famagusta suburb of Varosha. (AP Photo)
  • Varosha was the premier tourist resort on the island of Cyprus, but was abandoned after the Turkish invasion in 1974
  • Varosha residents were forced to flee south and the town remains occupied by Turkish troops to this day

ISTANBUL: Ankara is planning to open the abandoned town of Varosha on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Thursday.
“Yes there are preparations. Varosha will be opened,” Cavusoglu told the private CNN-Turk broadcaster.
Varosha was fenced off by the Turkish military in 1974 when they invaded the north of the island in response to an Athens-engineered coup attempting to unite Cyprus with Greece.
Varosha was the premier tourist resort on the island of Cyprus, but has been abandoned for more than four decades since the Turkish invasion.
The self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus was unilaterally declared in 1983 in a move recognized only by Ankara.
Varosha residents were forced to flee south and the town remains occupied by Turkish troops to this day.