Bankrolled by resurgent Turkey, northern Cypriots have little sympathy for economic troubles in south of the island
From the street in front of his shop not far from the UN-patrolled “dead zone” that runs through Cyprus like a scar, Ozkan Zeki offers his opinion about the great economic crisis that has struck the island’s Greek-controlled south.
At 76, the Turkish Cypriot is among the few who still have memories of mingling with Greeks before war entrenched the two ethnic communities behind a weed-infested no man’s land in 1974. As such, he says, he feels like a
