Home>News Center>World
             
     

    Cyprus peace talks start, UN says
    (Agencies)
    Updated: 2004-02-19 16:29

    Greek and Turkish Cypriot leaders formally began fresh peace talks Thursday, just hours after a small blast damaged the home of the pro-reunification prime minister of the island's Turkish enclave.

    The talks, under the control of United Nations envoy Alvaro de Soto, a Peruvian who brokered peace accords which ended civil strife in El Salvador, aim to unite the Mediterranean island's Greek and Turkish communities before it joins the European Union on May 1.

    "The talks have started," U.N. spokesman Brian Kelly said in Nicosia.

    The early morning percussion grenade or "sound bomb" outside Turkish Cypriot Prime Minister Mehmet Ali Talat's home shattered windows and damaged the main door of his house but nobody was hurt, Talat's party said in a statement.

     
      Today's Top News     Top World News
     

    Bigger role for private sectors

     

       
     

    Kerry: 'We voted for the China trade agreement'

     

       
     

    Standard Chartered to launch RMB services

     

       
     

    Teacher challenges Muzimei, posts nude photo

     

       
     

    Doctors find 350 coins in patient's belly

     

       
     

    Officials to aid AIDS battle in Henan

     

       
      Cyprus peace talks start, UN says
       
      Blast danger recedes at Iran train disaster site
       
      Small blast at Turk Cypriot PM's home before talks
       
      Jewish leaders urge end of Israel's 'demonization'
       
      Ex-Enron CEO expected to surrender to FBI
       
      'Horrifying attacks' reported in Sudan
       
     
      Go to Another Section  
     
     
      Story Tools  
       
      Related Stories  
       
    Small blast at Turk Cypriot PM's home before talks
      News Talk  
      The evil root of all instability in the world today  
    Advertisement