UK-BASED Turkish Cypriot brothers, who were never involved in politics or lobbying for the rights of Turkish Cypriots in the past, have said that they are “thrilled” after more than 6,000 people signed a petition in just “days” demanding direct flights to North Cyprus.Original Article
Kategorie: Standard
-
GÜNSEL B9 leading the charge
Chief reporter KEREM HASAN ‘drives the silence’ as he takes an exclusive spin in the Günsel B9, the first electric car to be manufactured in North CyprusOriginal Article
-
WATER WOES TO CONTINUE
WIDESPREAD water shortages are set to continue after it was announced that repairs to the 80km undersea pipeline carrying supplies from Turkey would not be completed until Monday at the earliest.Original Article
-
Walls are tumbling down
WORK has begun to repair and preserve the ancient walls of Lefkoşa.Original Article
-
BIDEN ‘NO STRANGER TO CYPRUS’
Analysts and politicians give their take on what the US President-elect’s success could mean for the islandOriginal Article
-
Campaigners call for end to pollution in industrial zones
DEMANDS are growing for Lefkoşa Turkish Municipality to end growing pollution on the city’s four industrial estates, including untreated sewage flowing down roads that are often blocked by discarded factory waste.Original Article
-
Whatever happened to “Kalli?”
On January 27, German tourist Karl Heinz Weiss left his hotel for an after-dinner walk – and disappeared into the night.Original Article
-
RECORD LOW TL HITS ECONOMY
TRNC consumer confidence falters local charities and tourism in crisis businesses face bankruptcy.Original Article
-
Turtle nesting site is now a ‘shanty town’
CAMPER vans at Kaplıca beach, a prime nesting site for Caretta Caretta turtles, have turned it into a rubbish-strewn shanty town, claims a leading environmental campaigner.Original Article
-
BRITS PUSH FOR THE VOTE
The British Residents’ Society is to push for citizenship for ex-pats with long-term residency, Cyprus Today can reveal.Original Article
-
COVID FINES ON THE WAY
PEOPLE who break Covid-19 laws could be fined up to six times the minimum monthly wage – 22,920TL based on the current gross minimum salary of 3,820TL – or even sent to prison, under tough new penalties approved by Parliament.Original Article