News Letter
Weather
Community
English home Forum Photo Gallery Features Newsletter Archive   About US Help Site Map
China
World
Opinion
Business
Sci-Edu
Culture/Life
Sports
Photos
 Services
- Newsletter
- News Archive
- Feedback
- Weather Forecast
 Search
Advanced
 About China
- China at a glance
- Constitution
- CPC & state organs
- Chinese leadership
- Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping

Home >> World
UPDATED: 14:39, June 25, 2004
Cyprus president condemns US statements on referendum
font size    

Cyprus President Tassos Papadopoulos on Tuesday strongly condemned the US statements about alleged manipulation by the Cyprus government in the run-up to a referendum last week.

Speaking to reporters before his departure for Athens, Papadopoulos expressed his great regret over the unfavorable impressions overseas about blackmail, threats, oppression, vilification and misleading before the referendum.

In a briefing Monday, US State Department spokesman Richard Boucher talked about manipulation by the Greek Cypriot leaders in the run-up to the referendum on Saturday, saying "the outcome was regrettable but not surprising, given those actions."

Papadopoulos refuted the allegations Monday by saying that the "no" camp and "yes" camp shared the television time on a 50-50 basis and himself only spent two hours and 45 minutes on TV since April 1.

He said that he did not make any interventions on TV shows, radio programs or newspapers.

The president also said that any intervention aimed at influencing the outcome of the referendum did not originate from within Cyprus, but from abroad through statements calculated at instigating sentiments of fear, insecurity and uncertainty among the voters.

In Saturday's referenda, the Greek Cypriot south voted against and the Turkish Cypriots voted for UN chief Kofi Annan plan, which means that only the world recognized Greek Cypriot-controlled south can enter the European Union on May 1.

The international community has given the Greek Cypriots a chilly reaction to their "no" vote against the backdrop that a united Cyprus is favored.

Cyprus, an east Mediterranean island, has been divided into the Turkish-Cypriot north and the Greek-Cypriot south since 1974 when Turkish troops entered the north of the island after a failed Greek-Cypriot coup seeking union with Greece.   

Source: Xinhua

Print friendly Version Comments on the story Recommend to friends Save to disk


   Recommendation
- China Forum
- PD Newsletter
- People's Comment
- Most Popular
 Related News
- World leaders regret failure of UN plan on Cyprus in referenda

- Referendum voting opens in Cyprus

- Russia vetoes UN resolution backing Cyprus unity plan


Copyright by People's Daily Online, all rights reserved