Sigma Live

Clerides: The Status of the Bases is Anachronistic - Need for Renegotiation

Published March 3, 2026, 09:09
Clerides: The Status of the Bases is Anachronistic - Need for Renegotiation

Former Attorney General Costas Clerides has raised the issue of the status of the British Bases, arguing that the Republic of Cyprus should have already begun negotiations to renegotiate their status. Mr. Clerides stressed that the opinion of the International Court of Justice in The Hague in the Mauritius case constitutes a strong legal weapon for Cyprus. According to Mr. Clerides, the aim is not to seek the expulsion of the bases, but to adapt them to modern international law. The regime established in 1960 is considered anachronistic and potentially dangerous. The Treaty of Establishment, as interpreted, maintained the colonial regime in the Bases, which Mr. Clerides described as a "colony in 2026." Mr. Clerides referred to the case of Mauritius and Chagos, where persistence and the use of international law led to negotiations and an agreement for the return of sovereignty to Mauritius. He emphasized that the United Kingdom may initially refuse to negotiate, but persistence and legal pressure can create new data. Mr. Clerides argued that Cyprus has the right to renegotiate the status of the Bases, as the current regime violates the right to self-determination of peoples and is incompatible with modern international law.