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From: The Republic of Cyprus Press and Information Office at <http://www.pio.gov.cy/>
OPINION: Republic of Cyprus: Eligibility for EU Membership
Summary
- We are asked whether the Republic of Cyprus is eligible to become a
member of the European Union. In this regard it is necessary to consider:
- Article 1 paragraph 2 of the Treaty of Guarantee, 1960;
- Article 50 of the Constitution of Cyprus, 1960; and/or
- Article 170 of the Constitution.
In our opinion, the answer is: yes. The Republic of Cyprus is eligible to
become a member of the EU. In particular:
- Article 1 paragraph 2 of the Treaty of Guarantee does not prohibit Cyprus
from becoming a member of a regional organisation such as the European
Union. Membership of the EU would not constitute participation ``in any
political or economic union with any State whatsoever'' within the meaning of
Article 1 paragraph 2.
- As to Article 50 of the Constitution, there is no person now filling the
role of Vice-President, and the provisions dealing with the powers of the
Vice President are in abeyance. Thus the Vice-Presidential veto provided
for in Article 50 cannot be exercised. In any event the accession of Cyprus
would not involve, in present circumstances, a ``manifest'' breach of internal
law within the meaning of Article 46 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of
Treaties, and thus it could not subsequently be invoked by Cyprus as a basis
for invalidating its consent to be bound by the EU treaties.
- Article 170 provides for most-favoured nation treatment to be extended by
Cyprus to the three guarantor states ``for all agreements whatever their
nature may be''. Such treatment has only to be extended ``by agreement on
appropriate terms''. In common with other most-favoured-nation clauses,
Article 170 does not prohibit Cyprus from entering into agreements which
confer benefits on third states; it envisages that benefits extended to the
most-favoured-nation will also be extended to each of the guarantors. Thus
Article 170 does not prohibit Cyprus from acceding to any agreement
whatever. In fact, EC membership is not regarded as triggering general mfn
obligations, under the GATT or otherwise. Turkey as a GATT contracting
party and applicant for EU membership is well aware of this practice. Both
Turkey and Greece, in bilateral treaties concluded with Cyprus after
independence, have recognised that mfn obligations in respect of trade in
products do not apply ``to privileges... preferences or concessions... granted...
in the future to other countries on account of... participation, entry or
association... [to] a customs union, a free trade area or an economic
community''. For these reasons Article 170 would not require Cyprus to
extend any additional benefits of EU membership to Turkey.
The Status of the Republic of Cyprus
- An initial point to be noted is that the Republic of Cyprus is recognised
as an independent state, including by all existing members of the EU. The
Government of Cyprus, based in Nicosia, is equally regarded as the
government of the Republic, with the normal competence and authority to
represent the state. This is so notwithstanding the constitutional
difficulties that have occurred in Cyprus since 1963, and the de facto
division of the island following the Turkish invasion in 1974.
- By contrast, no other entity within Cyprus is recognised as a state, as
the government of a state, or as having any degree of separate legal status
or personality on the international plane. The ``Turkish Republic of
Northern Cyprus'', the entity created in the north of the island following
the events of 1974, is recognized only by Turkey. The lack of international
status of the ``Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus'' has been consistently
reaffirmed by the Security Council as well as by the General Assembly, and
by the European Court of Human Rights, the European Court of Justice, and
national courts. For example in a case concerning the 1977 Protocol to the
1972 Association Agreement between the EC and Cyprus, the European Court of
Justice said:
``While the de facto partition of the territory of Cyprus, as a result of the
intervention of the Turkish armed forces in 1974, into a zone where the
authorities of the Republic of Cyprus continue fully to exercise their
powers and a zone where they cannot in fact do so raises problems that are
difficult to resolve in connection with the application of the Association
agreement to the whole of Cyprus, that does not warrant a departure from the
clear, precise and unconditional provisions of the 1977 Protocol on the
origin of products and administrative cooperation... Article 5 cannot in any
event confer on the Community the right to interfere in the internal affairs
of Cyprus. The problems resulting from the de facto partition of the island
must be resolved exclusively by the Republic of Cyprus, which alone is
internationally recognized.''
- Against this background we turn to consider the three provisions which,
it is said, prevent Cyprus from becoming a member of the EU, or at any rate
from doing so before Turkey also becomes a member.
Article I paragraph 2 of the Treaty of Guarantee
- The Treaty of Guarantee of 16 August 1960 was concluded between Cyprus on
the one part and the three guarantors, Greece, Turkey and the United Kingdom
on the other part, on the day Cyprus became independent. Article I of the
Treaty provides:
``The Republic of Cyprus undertakes to ensure the maintenance of its
independence, territorial integrity and security, as well as respect for its
Constitution.
It undertakes not to participate, in whole or in part, in any political or
economic union with any State whatsoever. It accordingly declares
prohibited any activity likely to promote, directly or indirectly, either
union with any other State or partition of the Island.''
By Article II, the three guarantor states ``taking note of the undertakings
of the Republic of Cyprus set out in Article I... recognise and guarantee the
independence, territorial integrity and security of the Republic of Cyprus,
and also the state of affairs established by the Basic Articles of its
Constitution.''
- We note that at different stages questions have been raised as to the
interpretation, continuing validity or legal effect of the Treaty of
Guarantee. Such issues only need to be considered if the provisions of the
Treaty would be infringed by Cyprus's accession to the EC. For the reasons
given here this is not the case.
- One point is, however, crucial to the interpretation of Article 1
paragraph 2 of the Treaty. That provision embodies an unconditional and
permanent prohibition upon partition or union with any state. It is not
limited to cases of union through membership of organisations or
participation in treaties to which Greece and Turkey are not members or
parties. Accordingly, if Article 1 paragraph 2 is interpreted as
prohibiting Cyprus from becoming a member of the EU, that prohibition is
permanent and unconditional. It has nothing to do with the question whether
or when Turkey may become a member of the EU.
- The immediate precursor of Article 1 paragraph 2 was Point 22 of the
``Basic Structure of the Republic of Cyprus'', initialled by the Greek and
Turkish Prime Ministers at Zurich on 11 February 1959. Point 22 provided:
``It shall be recognised that the total or partial union of Cyprus with any
other State, or a separatist independence for Cyprus (i.e., the partition of
Cyprus into two independent States), shall be excluded.''
The purpose of Point 22 was to exclude both Enosis and Taksim - union of
Cyprus with Greece, or division of the island leading to the union, or close
association, of one part with Greece and the other with Turkey. These were
the avowed aims of the two communities during the 1950s: the compromise
underlying the Zurich and London Accords of 1959 involved the abandonment of
both. But the question is whether Article 1 paragraph 2 of the Treaty of
Guarantee also had the effect of preventing Cyprus from ever becoming a
party to a supranational regional economic agreement such as the EEC (now
the EU).
The interpretation of Article I paragraph 2
- To answer that question it is necessary to apply the international law
rules of the interpretation of treaties. These are authoritatively set out
in Articles 31-33 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties of 1969,
which relevantly provide as follows:
Article 31 General rule of interpretation
1. A treaty shall be interpreted in good faith in accordance with the
ordinary meaning to be given to the terms of the treaty in their context and
in the light of its object and purpose.
3. There shall be taken into account, together with the context...
(b) any subsequent practice in the application of the treaty which
establishes the agreement of the parties regarding its interpretation...
Article 32 Supplementary means of interpretation
Recourse may be had to supplementary means of interpretation, including the
preparatory work of the treaty and the circumstances of its conclusion, in
order to confirm the meaning resulting from the application of article 31,
or to determine the meaning when the interpretation according to article 31:
(a) leaves the meaning ambiguous or obscure; or
(b) leads to a result which is manifestly absurd or unreasonable.
Thus the first step in any process of treaty interpretation is to consider
the actual language of the treaty provision in its context and in the light
of its object and purpose.
The ordinary meaning of Article 1 paragraph 2
- The second paragraph of Article I consists of two sentences. The first
contains a commitment by Cyprus itself ``not to participate, in whole or in
part, in any political or economic union with any State whatsoever''. The
second declares that any activities likely ``to promote, directly or
indirectly, either union with any other State or partition of the Island''
are prohibited. This is evidently aimed, inter alia, at popular agitation
in favour of enosis or partition, and thus extends beyond the actions of the
Government of Cyprus itself.
- It should first be noted that the term ``State'' in Article I is in the
singular. Moreover it is legitimate to take as the context of paragraph 2
the Constitution itself, to which paragraph 1 refers. Article 50 of the
Constitution refers to ``international organisations and pacts of alliance''.
Article 169 of the Constitution refers to ``international agreements with a
foreign State or any International Organisation relating to commercial
matters, economic co-operation... and modus vivendi''. Article I paragraph 2
of the Treaty of Guarantee thus proceeds on the basis of a distinction
between a ``political or economic union with any State'', on the one hand, and
``international organisations and pacts of alliance'', or economic cooperation
agreements, on the other hand. It is true that a ``political or economic
union with any State'' could be initiated by a treaty. But what is
prohibited by Article I paragraph 2 is union with another state, not
cooperation with a group of states in establishing a supranational
organization of a political and/or economic character.
- It should be noted that from the earliest development of international
organisations in the 19th century, the term ``union'' was quite often used.
Examples include, at the universal level, the International
Telecommunications Union (1865) and the Universal Postal Union (so titled
from 1878) and, at the regional level, the Western European Union (1954).
Cognate terms such as ``unity'' and ``united'' are also often used, either in
the title of the organisation, as in the Organisation of African Unity, or
in terms of its purposes, as with Article I of the Statute of the Council of
Europe. But a distinction has always been drawn between membership of
multilateral or plurilateral organisations of states (whatever their title),
and the political or economic union of one state with another state.
- That distinction holds for the European Union. It is not necessary for
present purposes exhaustively to analyse the European Union as it currently
exists under the Treaty on European Union of 7 February 1992 (the Maastricht
Treaty), or as it will become following the 1997 Intergovernmental
Conference. Despite the continuing evolution of the EU, the position is
clear enough. For example, the German Federal Constitutional Court has
described the EU as ``a supranational organization, which is separate from
the State authority of the Member States'', a ``supranational system of
competences''. According to the Court, the Maastricht Treaty...
``establishes a European Union of States which is to be borne by the Member
States and respects their national identity. It relates to Germany's
membership of supranational organizations, not membership of a European
State... The exercise of sovereign authority by a union of States such as the
European Union is based on powers conferred by States which remain sovereign
and which, at international level, always act through their governments and
thereby control the process of integration.''
A similar point is expressed by Article 88-1 of the French Constitution,
which describes the EC and the EU as ``established by States having freely
chosen, pursuant to the constitutive treaties of those entities, to exercise
certain of their powers in common''. The French Constitutional Council had
described the EU as ``an independent legal order which, although integrated
into the legal systems of the different Member states of the Communities,
does not form part of the institutional order of the French Republic''.
This recalls the well-known description of the EEC, given by the European
Court of Justice in 1964, as a distinct ``legal system which... became an
integral part of the legal systems of the Member States''. The European
Court has never suggested that the legal system of each member state has
become an integral part of the legal systems of the other members.
- Rather, what each of the descriptions quoted in the previous paragraph
seeks to convey is that, although the EU is a distinct community with its
own legal system and an existence separate from that of its member states,
and although it aspires to a ``more perfect union'', it is a legal system of a
transnational character in which each member state participates. The
member states have transferred certain defined elements of governmental
authority to the EU, not to each other. The law of the EU is part of the
laws of the member states, but the laws of the member states remain distinct
from each other, each controlled by its own constitutional system. The EU
is not a state, and it is inaccurate to describe any individual member state
as economically or politically in union with other individual member states.
In the language of the French Constitutional Council, no member state ``forms
part of the institutional order'' of any other member state. Rather they are
all linked in and through the community of the EU.
- This is a very different situation than the one envisaged and prohibited
by Article 1 paragraph 2 of the Treaty of Guarantee, which was concerned to
prevent Cyprus, or any part of Cyprus, becoming united with another
particular state. In fact, of course, the concern was to prevent any form
of political or economic union with either Greece or Turkey. As Professor
Lavroff put it at the time: ``On voit bien ici que la raison d'être des
accords du 19 février 1959 est de couper court aux prétentions émises par la
Grèce et la Turquie...'' Although for form's sake these two states were not
mentioned, it was precisely the formation of a statal union with either, in
whole or in part, that was excluded. It was such a union which the two
communities unsuccessfully sought to achieve in the conflicts of the 1950s.
On the basis of the ordinary meaning to be given to the first sentence of
Article 1 paragraph 2 in its context and in the light of its object and
purpose, membership of the EU does not involve ``political or economic union
with any State''.
- It might be argued that the effect of EU membership is indirectly to
promote union with any State, in that Cyprus by reason of its small size and
population would inevitably tend to be dominated indirectly by other member
states through the medium of the EU, and that this is contrary to the second
sentence of paragraph 2. The simple answer, however, is that the
prohibited result under both sentences of paragraph 2 is ``union with any
other State or partition of the Island''. The position in the EU, both
formally and in substance, is that the member states exercise collective
control over the institutions of the EU, which in turn generates the rules
and policies which member states must apply. There is no analogy whatever
to the situation described by Judge Anzilotti in his decisive opinion in the
Austro-German Customs Union case, where...
``In view of the great disproportion in the economic strengths of Germany and
Austria... Austria's economic life would sooner or later become dependent upon
Germany's... and its effect would therefore be to conform and strengthen the
movement towards the incorporation of Austria within a single big German
State''.
By contrast, Cyprus as a member of an organisation such as the European
Union with between 15 and 21 members would be less dependent on any single
state.
Subsequent practice in the application of Article 1 paragraph 2
- Under Article 31 (3) (b) of the Vienna Convention, the subsequent
practice of the parties to a treaty is to be taken into account if it
establishes their agreement as to the interpretation of the treaty.
Subsequent practice in the application of the Treaty of Guarantee suggests
that it has not been regarded by the parties as preventing Cyprus from
entering into treaties for closer economic and political relations with
groups of states. Perhaps the best example is the Association Agreement
between the EEC and Cyprus, signed at Brussels on 19 December 1972. The
Agreement envisages a customs union between Cyprus and the EEC (Article 2
(3)), and adopts a principle of non-discrimination as between nationals or
companies of member states, and also as between nationals or companies of
Cyprus (Article 5). Objections to the conclusion of the Agreement were made
in 1972 from the Turkish Cypriot side, but the EEC disregarded these on the
ground that they were internal matters for Cyprus. Turkey for its part
expressed concern over the possibility of discrimination against the Turkish
community in Cyprus, a concern addressed by Article 5 of the Agreement.
Neither the United Kingdom nor Turkey argued that the conclusion of the
Association Agreement was a breach of Article 1 paragraph 2 of the Treaty of
Guarantee: no-one suggested that the Agreement indirectly created or
envisaged an economic union with any existing member of the EEC. This
example is all the more significant in that, as Professor Toulemon put it,
such an association is a ``stage vers l'adhésion'', a probationary step in the
direction of membership.
The travaux préparatoires of Article 1 paragraph 2
- Under Article 32 of the Vienna Convention, regard can always be had to
the travaux préparatoires of a treaty in order to confirm its
interpretation. In fact, agreement on Point 22, the precursor of Article 1
paragraph 2, was reached by the Greek and Turkish Foreign Ministers at
Zurich on 11 February 1959, and was subsequently confirmed in discussions
with the British Government. The two Foreign Ministers reported their
agreement to the British Foreign Secretary on 12 February 1959, at which
meeting the following exchange took place:
``The Secretary of State... turned to the Zürich documents beginning with the
Treaty of Guarantee. Was the second paragraph of Article 1 intended to
preclude Cypriot membership of all international associations, as for
example the Free Trade Area if that ever came into existence.
M. Zorlu explained that the paragraph was intended to prohibit partition and
Enosis (whether with Greece or with any other country). M. Averoff agreed;
he explained that the wording was specifically designed to exclude possible
Greek devices in the direction of Enosis, such as a personal union of Cyprus
and Greece under the Greek Crown. M. Zorlu and M. Averoff both made it
clear that there would be no objection to Cypriot membership of
international associations of which both Greece and Turkey were members;
e.g., the Postal Union, and any Free Trade Area. Nor did they exclude
either Commonwealth membership for Cyprus or membership of the Sterling
Area. They would, indeed, welcome Commonwealth membership... Article 1 of
the Treaty of Guarantee could be amended if necessary to make clear that
neither Commonwealth nor Sterling Area membership were excluded. But the
final decision on such membership would, of course, rest with the Cypriots
themselves.''
Evidently the Foreign Secretary accepted this explanation, and no amendment
to Article 1 was found necessary.
- The matter was raised again in the London Joint Committee on Cyprus on
19 October 1959. The Committee, which consisted of Greek Cypriot and
Turkish Cypriot representatives as well as representatives of the United
Kingdom, Greece and Turkey, was responsible for finalizing the various texts
in accordance with the provisions agreed on by the three states at Zurich
and London. At the 26th meeting of the Committee, the following exchange
took place between the British chairman and the senior Greek Cypriot
representative:
``SIR KNOX HELM then asked if, apart from the proposed Article V Mr Rossides
accepted the draft text.
MR ROSSIDES replied affirmatively. He then asked the meaning of Article I
paragraph 2. He presumed it referred to union with Greece or Turkey, but it
seemed rather sweeping, as he supposed that Cyprus could for instance join
an economic organisation or the Commonwealth.
SIR KNOX HELM observed that that was coming near to re-examining the wording
of the Treaty, and that it was perhaps better not to start to try to
interpret the various Articles.
M. ROUMOS said he thought they could all assure Mr. Rossides and put on
record that it was certainly not intended that Cyprus should be precluded
from membership of the Free Trade Area or multilateral organisations. What
was meant was that Cyprus should not be politically united with Greece or
Turkey, or even economically in the narrow sense of customs union; but that
could not really be said in a Treaty.
M. BAYULKEN confirmed that the wording did not refer to any international
organisations, such as F.A.O., G.A.T.T., etc.
MR. ROSSIDES thanked M. Roumos and M. Bayulken for their explanation, and
then said that he must reply to Sir Knox Helm's remark that he was trying to
open discussion of the Treaty. When starting, he had said that he did not
dispute it, and had asked for elucidation... His Delegation had received a
constructive reply from the Greeks and Turks and had thought it proper to
raise the issue.''
- Thus the Greek and Turkish negotiators of the Treaty assured first the
British Government and subsequently the Cypriot representatives that Article
1 paragraph 2 of the Treaty of Guarantee would not prevent Cyprus becoming a
party to international organizations including free trade areas, common
currency areas, etc. Its concern was to prevent the two rival aims for
which the opposing forces in Cyprus had been fighting during the 1950s,
enosis or partition leading to de facto union with another state, together
with any indirect form of arrangement which might achieve the same end, such
as a ``narrow... customs union'' with Greece or Turkey. The travaux of Article
1 paragraph 2 confirm that it means exactly what it says, that the use of
the singular term ``State'' is deliberate, and that it is not addressed at
international organisations such as the EU.
The attitude of the international community to the Cyprus application for
membership
- This interpretation has also received support from the international
community more widely. Cyprus applied for EC membership on 3 July 1990. In
its opinion on the application, the European Commission stated:
``When presenting its application for accession, the Government of the
Republic of Cyprus, recognized by the European Community and its Member
States as the only legitimate government representing the Cypriot people,
addressed the Community on behalf of the whole of the island. The
application was strongly challenged by the de facto authorities of the
northern part of the island. While acknowledging that it would be in the
interest of the Turkish Cypriot community to form part of the European
Community, these authorities rejected the right of the Government of the
Republic of Cyprus to speak for the whole of Cyprus in such an approach.
They based their position on the Guarantee Treaty and the wording of the
1960 Constitution, which grants the President and Vice-President (a Turkish
Cypriot) a veto over any foreign policy decision, particularly any decision
on joining an international organization or alliance that does not count
both Greece and Turkey among its members. They consider, accordingly, that
in the prevailing circumstances the Community should not take any on the
application. The Community, however, following the logic of its established
position, which is consistent with that of the United Nations where the
legitimacy of the Government of the Republic of Cyprus and non-recognition
of the `Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus' are concerned, felt that the
application was admissible and initiated the procedures laid down by the
Treaties in order to examine it.''
The Commission went on to deal with economic and other issues relating to
possible accession, reaching a broadly favourable conclusion. For present
purposes, however, what matters is that the Commission confirmed, and member
states subsequently endorsed, the view that Cyprus is ``eligible for
membership''. That view has since been strongly reaffirmed.
- The EU's attitude cannot be explained on the basis that from its point
of view Cyprus's accession to the EU would prevail over its treaty
obligations to a third state, Turkey. On the contrary the EU has been
careful to preserve existing treaty rights and obligations, as is shown by
Article 234 of the EC Treaty, which expressly preserves such rights and
obligations. This concern has been taken fully into consideration in the
subsequent adhesion treaties, and it is fully consistent with the law of
treaties. The EU's position is, evidently, that Cyprus is not prohibited
by its existing treaty obligations either from association with or
membership of the Union.
- Reference may also be made to the position of the United Nations, as
expressed by the Security Council in its consideration of the Cyprus
question since 1990. The most recent resolution of the Security Council on
Cyprus contains the following paragraphs:
``11. Reaffirms its position that a Cyprus settlement must be based on a
State of Cyprus with a single sovereignty and international personality and
a single citizenship, with its independence and territorial integrity
safeguarded, and comprising two politically equal communities as described
in the relevant Security Council resolutions, in a bi-communal and bi-zonal
federation, and that such a settlement must exclude union in whole or in
part with any other country or any form of partition or secession...
14. Reaffirms that the decision of the European Union concerning the opening
of accession negotiations with Cyprus is an important development that
should facilitate an overall settlement.''
These paragraphs also occur in earlier resolutions. The first paragraph has
been repeated in successive resolutions since 1990; the second was also
contained in SC Resolution 1092 of 23 December 1996. The conjunction of the
two paragraphs makes it quite clear that the Security Council regards the
accession of Cyprus to the EU as plainly consistent with a renewed
commitment to avoid ``union in whole or in part with any other country''.
Austria and the EU: An Analogous case of a guarantee against political union
- The question of the accession of Cyprus to the EU has common features,
from a legal point of view, with the earlier question of the accession of
Austria. Under Article 4 (1) of the Austrian State Treaty of 1955, Austria
undertook not to ``enter into political or economic union with Germany in any
form whatever''. Article 4 paragraph 2 amplified that guarantee against
another Anschluss, in the following terms:
``In order to prevent such union Austria shall not conclude any agreement
with Germany, nor do any measures likely, directly or indirectly, to promote
political or economic union with Germany, or to impair its territorial
integrity or political or economic independence. Austria further undertakes
to prevent within its territory any act likely, directly or indirectly, to
promote such union and shall prevent the existence, resurgence and
activities of any organizations having as their aim political or economic
union with Germany, and pan-German propaganda in favour of union with
Germany.''
- Although the matter was discussed following Austria's application in
1989 for EC membership, the view taken was that membership was in no way
inconsistent with Article 4 paragraph 2 of the State Treaty. Of the parties
to the State Treaty, the USSR initially objected to EU membership, but it
did so primarily because EU membership was inconsistent with Austrian
neutrality, a subject deliberately not dealt with in the State Treaty. As
to the issue of indirect union with Germany, the position of the Austrian
Government was that Article 4 was ``irrelevant''. The EC Commission
evidently agreed: in its lengthy report on the Austrian application, it too
regarded the State Treaty as irrelevant and focussed exclusively on the
issue of neutrality.
- Austrian and foreign commentators equally dismissed the argument. For
example, Lernhardt wrote that Article 4...
``clearly refers to the bilateral relationship between Austria and Germany.
Membership in an association of states could at best be affected by the
article if this association were entirely dominated by Germany. In the EC,
Germany is only one of twelve member-states, without coming even closely to
having a majority of votes. With complete justification each of the present
EC members would strictly reject any interpretation of its accession as
`Anschluss with Germany'.''
As early as 1963, Ermacora came to the conclusion that the accession to the
EEC would not contradict Article 4 of the State Treaty: in his view the
prohibition of ``Anschluß'' related to union with a state, not to a
supranational community. Similar conclusions were drawn by
Seidl-Hohenveldern with regard to the proposed association agreement. On
the question whether EU membership would amount indirectly to union with
Germany, the question was whether German influence or control over the EEC
(now EU) amounted to domination, so as to produce indirectly what Article 4
directly prohibited. Again, the unanimous answer was that it would not: on
the contrary, the exclusion of Austria from the Common Market, it was
concluded, would weaken the economic survival capacity of Austria and,
consequently, undermine the objective of Article 4 (2) of the State Treaty.
In the event, Austria was admitted to the EU in 1994, without Russian
objection and with no amendment having been made to Article 4 of the State
Treaty.
- Similar conclusions apply to the question of the compatibility of an
accession of the Republic of Cyprus to the EU. No single Member State of
the EU has or claims to have such an influence in either a formal or a
material sense over the decision-making procedure of the EU that it could be
seen as dominating the EU. Hence, accession of the Republic of Cyprus to
the European Union cannot be qualified as an ``economic or political union
with any State whatsoever''.
Article 50 of the 1960 Constitution
- We turn to the arguments relating to the Constitution of 1960. Article
50 of the Constitution provides, in part, as follows:
``1. The President and the Vice-President of the Republic, separately or
conjointly, shall have the right of final veto on any law or decision of the
House of Representatives or any part thereof concerning-
(a) foreign affairs, except the participation of the Republic in
international organisations and pacts of alliance in which the Kingdom of
Greece and the Republic of Turkey both participate...
2. The above right of veto may be exercised either against the whole of a
law or decision or against any part thereof, and in the latter case such law
or decision shall be returned to the House of Representatives for a decision
whether the remaining part thereof will be submitted, under the relevant
provisions of this Constitution, for promulgation.''
Article 50 defines ``foreign affairs'' broadly, including ``the conclusion of
international treaties, conventions and agreements''. Under Articles 50 (3)
and 52, the right of veto must be exercised within 15 days of the
transmission of the law or decision.
- As a matter of form, we note that Article 50 does not allow the
President or Vice-President to veto a law or decision in advance of its
consideration by the House of Representatives. More important, however, are
certain matters of fact. The first Vice-President of the Republic was Mr
Kutchuk, who was elected under Article 39 of the Constitution in December
1959. There has never been another election for the Vice-Presidency. From
1963 constitutional difficulties arose, and the Turkish Cypriot office
holders under the Constitution progressively withdrew from participation.
Moreover since the Turkish invasion of 1974 the leadership of the Turkish
Cypriot community has been seeking the partition of Cyprus and the
establishment of a separate Turkish Cypriot state. Accordingly the
position in fact is that the provisions of the 1960 Constitution dealing
with the Vice-Presidency, as with other provisions for Turkish Cypriot
representation in the Government of Cyprus, are presently inoperative.
Despite this, as we have noted, the international community continues to
recognise that the Government of Cyprus has the normal capacity to represent
Cyprus and to conduct its foreign affairs.
- The question is whether, in these circumstances, Cyprus is prevented
from validly acceding to the EU. The answer, in our opinion, is clearly no.
Article 50 of the Constitution recognises that Cyprus has the normal
capacity of a state to enter into ``international treaties, conventions and
agreements'' and to become a member of all kinds of international
organizations and alliances. It provides a procedural veto on such
decisions, the veto to be cast by a Vice-President elected and effectively
performing his functions under the Constitution. In the absence of a veto
duly cast in accordance with Article 50, the decision to accede is valid and
effective.
- Reference should be made here to Articles 27 and 46 of the Vienna
Convention on the Law of Treaties. Article 27 provides:
``A party may not invoke the provisions of its internal law as justification
for its failure to perform a treaty. This rule is without prejudice to
article 46.''
Article 46 in turn provides:
``1. A State may not invoke the fact that its consent to be bound by a treaty
has been expressed in violation of a provision of its internal law regarding
competence to conclude treaties as invalidating its consent unless that
violation was manifest and concerned a rule of its internal law of
fundamental importance.
2. A violation is manifest if it would be objectively evident to any State
conducting itself in the matter in accordance with normal practice and in
good faith.''
Thus the general rule is that a breach of internal law, including
constitutional law, is no excuse for failure to comply with international
obligations. Moreover such a breach can only be relied upon as a basis for
challenging the validity of a treaty in quite exceptional circumstances.
Only the state whose constitutional rules have been breached may rely on the
breach, and it can only do so in a case of manifest violation. The rule
under general international law may be even stricter.
- Thus even if it could be argued that the accession of Cyprus to the EU
would be against the expressed wishes of the Turkish community, the fact
remains that, under Article 50, the veto power is vested not in that
community as such but in a Vice-President duly elected and effectively
performing his functions under the Constitution. At present there is no
such person, and Article 50 is simply inapplicable. In any event, in
present circumstances an alleged violation of Article 50 would not be
``manifest''. This was the position taken by the EC when the Association
Agreement of 1972 was concluded, and again in its consideration of Cyprus's
application for membership. It was confirmed by the European Court of
Justice in 1994. It has been the consistent position of the United
Nations, for example in the periodic resolutions extending the mandate of
UNFICYP, which resolutions have been based expressly on the agreement of the
Government of the Republic of Cyprus without any reference to Article 50 of
the Constitution.
- The 1960 Constitution is no doubt unusual in that the three guarantor
states have a legally recognised interest in its implementation. But
neither the Constitution nor the Treaty of Guarantee give the guarantor
states themselves any veto over decisions by the Government of the Republic
in the field of foreign affairs, and specifically over decisions to apply
for membership of international organisations. The veto power is vested in
certain high officials of the Government of Cyprus itself, and that power
cannot be transformed into a wholly different and unexpressed veto power to
be exercised by the present leadership of the Turkish Cypriots which is
seeking to secede from Cyprus (contrary both to the Constitution and the
Treaty of Guarantee), let alone by one of the guarantor powers itself. The
position in present circumstances is that no Vice-President exists to
exercise the veto, and in the absence of a validly exercised veto in
accordance with Article 50, the constitutional authority of the Government
to carry on the foreign affairs of Cyprus is unquestionable.
- That this is the case has been widely recognised. If the argument drawn
from Article 50 were valid, this would mean that no treaty concluded by the
Republic of Cyprus since 1963 could be valid. This is obviously
contradicted by the fact that Cyprus has entered into hundreds of treaties
since that date with virtually all states in the world, and their validity
has never been challenged despite the impossibility of applying Article 50
of the Constitution.
Article 170 of the 1960 Constitution
- Article 170 (1) of the 1960 Constitution is also invoked. It provides
as follows:
``1. The Republic shall, by agreement on appropriate terms, accord
most-favoured-nation treatment to the Kingdom of Greece, the Republic of
Turkey and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland for all
agreements whatever their nature may be.''
It is said that, in the event of its accession to the EU, Cyprus will not be
in a position to comply with Article 170 so far as Turkey is concerned. But
this ignores, inter alia, the language of Article 170 itself. Most-favoured
nation (``mfn'') treatment has only to be extended ``by agreement on
appropriate terms''. In common with other most-favoured-nation clauses,
Article 170 does not prohibit Cyprus from entering into agreements which
confer benefits on third states. It merely requires that treatment extended
to the most-favoured-nation also be extended to each of the guarantors.
Moreover, unlike most mfn clauses in treaties, the unilateral undertaking in
Article 170 is conditional. Mfn treatment was only to be extended under a
subsequent agreement with Cyprus: it was to be a matter for the parties to
reach agreement in particular ``on appropriate terms'' for granting such
treatment.
- It is understood that Turkey has never claimed the benefit of Article
170 of the Constitution. Moreover it is well understood, both among EU
members and third states, that entry to the EU does not trigger the general
mfn obligations of the entrant to third states. This is consistent with
Article XXIV (5) of the GATT, and it is a position which Turkey itself, as
a WTO member and an applicant for EU membership, must be taken to have
accepted. Indeed, such a position has been expressly accepted in bilateral
trade agreements entered into by Cyprus with both Turkey and Greece. The
Trade Agreement between Cyprus and Turkey of 9 November 1963 provides in
Article 1 for mfn treatment to be extended to duties or charges of any kind
on importation of the goods of either country to the other. Article 1
further provides that:
``The above most-favoured-nation treatment shall not apply:
...
(c) to privileges, exemptions from taxes (fees), preferences or concessions
which each of the Contracting countries has granted or will grant in the
future to other countries on account of a present or future participation,
entry or association by them to a customs union, a free trade area or an
economic community.''
Article 1 thus expressly recognises that the mfn obligation in respect of
taxes or charges on import of goods is not triggered by more favourable
treatment extended by either state to its partners in a free trade area or
economic community. The economic community that was envisaged at the time
was, of course, the EEC. In the light of this Agreement, as well as of the
network of relations created under the association agreements between both
Cyprus and Turkey and the EU, it is clear that Article 170 of the
Constitution would not require any more favourable treatment to be extended
to Turkey in the event of Cyprus becoming an EU member.
- It should be noted in passing that Article 1 of the 1963 Trade Agreement
between Cyprus and Turkey expressly envisages that Cyprus will or may enter
an economic community such as the EEC. This contradicts the argument now
made that Article 1 paragraph 2 of the Treaty of Guarantee permanently
prevents such entry.
Conclusions
- It has not been necessary in this opinion to deal with any questions
that would arise if Article 1 of the Treaty of Guarantee, or Articles 50 or
170 of the Constitution, were to be interpreted so as to preclude Cyprus
from acceding to the EU. Even on that assumption, it would be very doubtful
whether Turkey could raise any objection, because of its own breaches of the
Treaty of Guarantee. But in our opinion the meaning of the three
provisions is clear. Thus questions of estoppel, or of the application of
the principle that a party in breach of a treaty provision may not itself
rely on it, simply do not arise.
- For the reasons we have given, there is no basis for the view that
Cyprus is prevented by the Treaty of Guarantee, or by any provisions of the
Constitution of 1960, from becoming a member of the EU.
James Crawford
Whewell Professor of International Law, University of Cambridge
Gerhard Hafner
Professor of International Law, University of Vienna
Alain Pellet
Professor of International Law, University of Paris-X
24 September 1997
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