US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met President Nikos Christodoulides on Sunday to discuss a maritime aid corridor from the island to the heavily bombarded and besieged Gaza Strip.
“It was important that the initiative of the Republic of Cyprus was discussed,” said Christodoulides afterwards.
“The US Secretary of State welcomes the approach of Nicosia, taking into account the fact that we have excellent relations with all neighbouring countries.
“He thanked us for our role in the evacuation of the population from the region.
“We agreed to stay in touch, specifically to see how conditions can be created to ensure unhindered humanitarian aid to Gaza,” he added.
Israel has said it will destroy Hamas after the Islamist terror group’s October 7 attacks that Israeli officials say killed 1,400 people, mostly civilians.
Blinken and Christodoulides discussed the situation in the Middle East, government spokesman Konstantinos Letymbiotis said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
Their conversation at Larnaca airport included “a dedicated, one-way maritime corridor of sustained flow of humanitarian aid from Cyprus to civilians in Gaza”, Letymbiotis said.
Earlier Sunday, Christodoulides said France, the European Commission and Israel backed Nicosia’s initiative to open a humanitarian sea route.
“On that basis, we are talking with the United Nations because the UN will receive the aid and not Hamas so that it reaches the population,” Christodoulides told reporters.
After raising the plan with European Union leaders last month, Christodoulides said he had spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and French President Emmanuel Macron about the issue.
He said Cyprus was taking the initiative as the nearest EU member state to the region — the island is about 370 kilometres (230 miles) from Gaza — and because of its good relations with Arab states and Israel.
“It is important that both the French president and the president of the (European) Commission have endorsed our initiative. We are working on the details so that it can be implemented,” Christodoulides said.
He said, “we must be ready at any moment, and as soon as conditions allow it, to proceed with implementing this proposal”.
Asked whether there were discussions with Israel on a ceasefire to provide humanitarian aid, he said: “Israel, the prime minister himself, is in favour of our initiative.”
“We are discussing the details… because the maritime area around Gaza does not allow for ships to approach.”
Last week, Cyprus Foreign Minister Constantinos Kombos visited Jordan and the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.
Christodoulides has also involved Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in the talks.
Cyprus already serves as a transit hub for foreign nationals evacuated from Israel because of the war.