Cyprus | Nikos Christodoulides named winner of the presidential election

(Nicosia) The former head of diplomacy of Cyprus Nikos Christodoulides won the presidential election on Sunday in this divided island in the eastern Mediterranean, promising a non-partisan government in which women would have a large place.




Aged 49, this man who was supported by center parties is the youngest head of state ever elected to lead Cyprus. He will take office on 1er March.

He won 51.97% of the vote (204,867 votes) against 48.03% for his rival, Andreas Mavroyiannis, supported by the communist party Akel, according to the latest figures from the government’s electoral service. The participation rate was 72.4%.

After the announcement of his victory, Mr. Christodoulides said he wanted a “50-50” government, with an equal number of women and men, and which could benefit from “broad social support”. Only two women are currently in the cabinet of outgoing President Nicos Anastasiades.

In these press statements, he said he wanted to meet the leaders of the Disy (right) and Akel parties, when he was elected without the support of either of these two heavyweights in the Cypriot political landscape.


PHOTO PHILIPPOS CHRISTOU, ASSOCIATED PRESS

The candidate Andreas Mavroyiannis, former ambassador to France and Ireland

The election was presented as tight: Nikos Christodoulides, head of diplomacy between 2018 and 2022, came out on top in the first round, on February 5, with 32.04% of the vote, slightly ahead of another seasoned diplomat, Andreas Mavroyiannis, 66 (29.59%), former ambassador to France and Ireland.

Both presented themselves as independents.

High inflation


PHOTO LOUIZA VRADI, REUTERS

A woman is going to cast her ballot in Cyprus, in the second round of the presidential election.

The new president succeeds the conservative Nicos Anastasiades, 76, who is completing two five-year terms and to whom he was reputed to be very close.

After the defeat of its candidate in the first round, the party of Mr. Anastasiades, Disy, which excluded Mr. Christodoulides for having applied against the opinion of the party, had refused to give voting instructions, leaving the game open.

Rising energy and food prices remain top of mind for Cypriots. Inflation reached 10.9% in 2022, before slowing in January to 7.1%.

The Communists, who backed Mr Mavroyiannis, have come under heavy criticism for their handling of the 2012-2013 financial crisis, which nearly pushed eurozone member Cyprus into bankruptcy.

Vasso Pelekanou, a 47-year-old woman interviewed at a polling station in Nicosia, believes that the new president should help the middle classes, abandoned according to her by the outgoing government. “The rich have become even richer,” she laments.

Fight against corruption

Dora Petsa, 75, a retiree, expected the future president “to settle the Cyprus question [la division de l’île] so that we can live together with the Cypriot-Turks”.

The new head of state will thus be called upon to relaunch talks on the reunification of the island, which have been on hold since 2017. Cyprus has been divided since Turkey’s invasion in 1974 of its northern third, in response to a coup d’etat by Greek Cypriot nationalists who wanted to attach the country to Greece.

The Republic of Cyprus exercises its authority only over the southern part of the island, separated by the Green Line [une zone démilitarisée contrôlée par l’ONU] of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), self-proclaimed and recognized only by Ankara.

Mr Mavroyiannis, former head of the Greek Cypriot negotiators in the reunification talks (2013-2022), had promised if elected to reopen talks from day one. Mr. Christodoulides takes a tougher stance.

The fight against corruption also dominated the electoral debate, especially after the “golden passport” scandal. This program of granting passports against investments on the island had to be canceled due to allegations of corruption.

Another sensitive subject on this island close to the coasts of the Middle East and Turkey: the influx of migrants, for which the two candidates had promised to act. Authorities claim that 6% of the 915,000 people living in the south of the island are asylum seekers.

The head of European diplomacy Josep Borrell congratulated Mr. Christodoulides on Twitter, saying he hoped to continue to cooperate on “important subjects for Cyprus”, in particular by paving the way towards “a solution to the Cyprus problem”.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis also offered his congratulations to the president-elect during a telephone interview with Mr. Christodoulides, according to the Greek news agency Ana.


source site-59