Home
Current Issue
Developments
Archive
Table of Contents
Surveys
Book Reviews
Discussion Forum
Information
Reading Room
Links of Interest
Search
Join our email list
Translate this page
  

Previous Page Table of ContentsNext Page

The Cyprus Question Before the European Court of Justice

Stefan Talmon*

Full text available: PDF format **

Abstract

Cyprus, linked with the EU by an association agreement, has been de facto divided since 1974. In 1983, the northern part declared independence as the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), a state recognized only by Turkey. The English courts, faced with the questions of whether certificates required under EC law for the importation of goods originating in Cyprus under the association agreement could be issued by the TRNC authorities and, if not, whether these certificates could be issued in Turkey by Turkish officials instead, referred these questions to the ECJ for a preliminary ruling. The ECJ ruled that EU members must not accept certificates issued by those authorities because cooperation required under the certificate system was excluded with the TRNC as it was not recognized either by the EU or its members. However, indirect imports from Cyprus via third non-member states were permissible under certain conditions, leaving open, however, the question of whether these conditions could be satisfied in Turkey, a question (still) to be decided by the English courts. By banning the direct importation of Turkish Cypriot products or taxing them out of the European market on the basis of the non-recognition of the TRNC, the ECJ misjudged the scope and consequences of the principle of non-recognition in international law and, in fact, applied economic sanctions, a measure that should be reserved for the political bodies responsible for the conduct of the Community's foreign relations.

* Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Tuebingen.

** The free viewer (Acrobat Reader) for PDF file is available at the Adobe Systems.

Previous Page Table of ContentsNext Page





Top of Page

© 1990-2004 European Journal of International Law
All comments and suggestions should be sent to webmaster
This site is part of the Academy of European Law online, a joint partnership of the Jean Monnet Center at NYU School of Law and the Academy of European Law at the European University Institute.
This file was last modified: Thursday, November 20, 2003 01:37AM