The former foreign minister of Cyprus, Nikos Christodoulides, was on Sunday elected president of the EU member state on the divided Mediterranean island.
The seasoned politician gained 51.97 percent of the vote in a run-off, beating communist-backed career diplomat Andreas Mavroyiannis who took 48.03 percent.
Widely tapped as a favourite even before last Sunday’s first round, he is seen as an independent backed by centrist parties that take a tough line on moribund UN-backed talks on ending the island’s decades-old division.
His candidature sparked a schism within the conservative ruling DISY party, whose candidate Averof Neofytou was booted out of the race after coming in third place in the initial round — a first in the party’s history.
It is the first time a president has been elected without the support of the two largest parties, DISY and the communist AKEL. After his victory was announced, Christodoulides said he wanted to meet with the leaders of both.
“The need to form a government of broad social acceptance was not a pre-election slogan, it was something that we will implement in practice”, Christodoulides said.
Christodoulides served as government spokesman and then foreign minister under outgoing President Nicos Anastasiades but quit last year to enter the race.
Christodoulides later found himself in the uncomfortable position of wooing votes from DISY, after Neofytou failed to make the run-off.
DISY would usually be expected to urge its supporters to vote against a communist-backed candidate, but Christodoulides is despised by many in the party who see him as putting personal ambition over the interests of the party and the island.
With a doctorate in political science from the University of Athens, the career politician has also studied in Malta and New York.
He launched his diplomatic career in 1999, climbing up the ranks until he became foreign minister in 2018.
He previously considered that the main problems facing the electorate were “the cost of living and housing, immigration and the Cyprus problem”, referring to the island’s division.
Talks have been in deep freeze since 2017 to resolve the division that resulted from Turkey’s 1974 invasion and occupation of the northern third of the island in response to a Greek-sponsored coup.
Christodoulides has long taken a hawkish stance on the talks.
Moreover, he has said he is open to forming alliances with extreme-right parties such as ELAM, ultra-nationalists who came in fourth place with six percent of the vote.
Christodoulides has also vowed a “zero-tolerance” approach to corruption as the island continues to deal with the fallout from a cash-for-passports scandal that plagued the previous administration.
Despite having been foreign minister in that cabinet, he managed to escape untainted by the scandal.
He ruffled feathers in September 2020 by blocking a European Union plan to sanction Belarus, saying Cyprus would only agree if the bloc also sanctioned Turkey.
The former foreign minister also failed to take a clear stance on sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, earning him criticism for what some labelled a pro-Moscow position.
Cyprus has for decades been home to a sizeable population of Russians.
Another key issue that Christodoulides has vowed to tackle is the topic of immigration on the island, where six percent of the 915,000 people living in the south are asylum seekers.
Cyprus is second only to Austria across the EU in terms of first-time asylum seekers relative to the population.
The new president has vowed faster processing times for asylum applications, with a target of 3,000 cases per month.—APP