Turkey hopes for Cyprus referendum in early 2012

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Turkey hopes terms for the reunification of Cyprus can be agreed by the end of the year so that a referendum can take place in early 2012, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Saturday during a visit to the Turkish Cypriot enclave in the north of the island.
"We hope to find a solution to the Cyprus problem by the end of the year, and hold a referendum in the early months of next year so that Cyprus can take on the presidency of the EU as a new state that represents the whole island," Davutoglu said.
The Cyprus dispute is a major obstacle for Turkey's bid to join the European Union, aside from opposition from EU heavyweights France and Germany.
Greek Cypriots say Turkey cannot join the bloc until the Cyprus conflict is resolved.
The EU also expects Turkey to implement the Ankara Protocol, whereby Turkish ports and airports will be opened to traffic from Cyprus. Turkey says the EU should also end its blockade of the Turkish Cypriot enclave.
"A solution will bring real peace to the eastern Mediterranean and truly unite Europe," Davutoglu said during the joint news conference with the Turkish Cypriot leader, Dervish Eroglu.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said after meeting Eroglu and Greek Cypriot leader Demetris Christofias in Geneva on Thursday that he expected the two sides to overcome their differences by October.
Peace talks have stumbled on since being relaunched in 2008. The talks are Cypriot led, though in coming months the U.N. team acting as a facilitator could take a more active role.
In principle, both sides agree to reunite Cyprus as a two-zone federation, but they have been unable to reconcile differences ranging from re-drawing existing boundaries, to property claims by thousands uprooted in conflict.
Ban said in Geneva that if the sides were able to reach convergence on all core issues — defined by the UN as EU issues, economy, governance, property, security and territory — it would pave the way towards convening a final, international conference.
Territorial and broader security issues involving the roles of Cyprus's guarantor powers – Britain, Greece and Turkey – have barely been touched in negotiations.
Any agreement the two sides reach must go to a plebiscite. In a referendum in 2004 Turkish Cypriots voted for reunification, but Greek Cypriots rejected it.