Subject: Re: [BoundaryPoint] Cyprus
Date: Sep 09, 2000 @ 17:26
Author: Jesper & Nicolette Nielsen ("Jesper & Nicolette Nielsen" <jesniel@...>)
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I haven't been able to find a good Cyprus map online. I have a much better one, that I will bring to Peter one day to scan, so we can post it for the group.

Jesper

>
> jesper
>
> >I was here (not my photo though)
> >
> ><http://www.hellas.org/cyprus/images/cyfrou-1.jpg>
> >http://www.hellas.org/cyprus/images/cyfrou-1.jpg
> >
> >This is were Greek Cyprus stops.
> >
> >You climp up the stairs, the wall is the border to the UN buffer zone. You
> >can (if you are there) spot Turkish Cyprus at the other side of the UN
> >buffer zone. The buffer zone looks untouched for the last 25 years.
>
> yes it was just dont touch & go there for years
> but then it all seems to have hardened up like crazy glue
> while nobody was noticing
>
> on this map
> http://www.lib.utexas.edu/Libs/PCL/Map_collection/cia99/Cyprus_sm99.jpg
> you can see 4 de facto tripoints
> 1 set of twins of
> cyprus united kingdom united nations
> & another set of twins of
> turkey united kingdom united nations
>
> do you or does anyone think we should count these as anything
>
> i mean
> does the fact that they are not legally agreed to make them less real than
> more conventional world class tripoints
>
> or the fact that one party of them is the united nations
>
> for is the participation of the united nations in tripoints with its member
> nations any different from the particpation of a national entity in
> tripoints with its constituent parts
> as for example in the conjunctions of federal territories or a federal
> capital district or federal waters with member states or provinces
>
>
> & nice digs for a supposed trouble spot tho
>
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