North Cyprus – the beginning of a chess tradition
Report by WGM Elena Partac

The island of Cyprus is obviously a territory blessed by God – a beautiful
land of dreams that become reality. Our first visiting target was Buffavento
Castle, located at 950 m above sea level – or 1001 steps needed to reach
it. It was built as a part of the defensive chain against Arab raids. A birds-eye
view of North Cyprus will surely stay in your memory for a long long time. Take
a look…

Buffavento castle, the view from above 1000 meters

Enjoying the view – our reporter WGM Elena Partac
North Cyprus covers about one-third of Cyprus island, approximetely 3400 sq
km. A large part of this land is covered with citrus and olive groves, pine
forests and cypresses. It is one of the few unspoiled corners of the Mediterranean
world. The Flora and fauna of North Cyprus is varied and it reminded me of our
school Biology book. It seems like nothing is missing on this beautiful land.

The view of Noth Cyprus seems like a picture post-card

Cactus plants doing extremely very well in North Cyprus
The truly amazing thing is that each occupying force left a part of itself
on this island, a rich and colourful diversity of cultures: Greeks, Egyptians,
Assyrians, Phoenicians and Persians, Romans, Byzantines and Ottoman Turks.

The Golden Beach and Turquoise Mediterranean

We can not continue without mentioning the turquoise color of the Mediterranean
Sea surounding the island. And if it’s time for the beach, you cannot miss the
Golden Beach area. A place where you can see the sea floor through 50 m of crystaline
water.
Chess in North Cyprus
Probably, we know only some basic and insignificant information about chess
in North Cyprus, but being there and visiting several chess clubs and chess
players, you can see that this magnificent island has started insistently to
develop chess, and it seems that nothing could ever stop it. When chess becomes
an object of study in schools and a real hobby for a lot of citizens, you understand
how important it is to follow the needs and wishes of the people as well as
chess players living in North Cyprus. The international tournament “Duzkaya”
was obviously one of the first, but important, steps on the way toward the bright
future of chess in North Cyprus. The first edition of “Duzkaya” took place in
Kyrenia town, renowned for the Kyrenia Castle. The Chess Federation of North
Cyprus, together with the Municipality of Kyrenia town, have been successfully
included in the organization of this event. Hopefully it will become a traditional
international chess tournament.
“Duzkaya” International Tournament
The first edition of the “Duzkaya” international chess tournament was held
from 29 April until the 10th of May, in the “Malpas Hotel” city of Kyrenia,
which was also one of the event sponsors. There were twelve players from Turkey
and the Republic of Moldova who played a round roben tournament. The first three
places were won by three Moldavian chess players: Iulian Baltag, WGM Elena Partac
and WGM Carolina Smokina.
Rnk |
Sd. |
Name |
Rtg |
FED |
Pts |
SB. |
1 |
8 |
Baltag Julian |
2348 |
MOL |
10 |
47,75 |
2 |
5 |
Partac Elena |
2127 |
MOL |
8½ |
38,75 |
3 |
4 |
Smokina Karolina |
2192 |
MOL |
8 |
38,50 |
4 |
11 |
Atesin Tarik |
2183 |
TUR |
7½ |
31,25 |
5 |
12 |
Barissever Erdogan |
2162 |
TUR |
6½ |
27,25 |
6 |
10 |
Sertbay Huseyin |
2189 |
TUR |
6 |
21,50 |
7 |
7 |
Karakas Evrim |
2122 |
TUR |
5½ |
24,75 |
8 |
2 |
Özon Kemal |
2093 |
TUR |
4½ |
15,25 |
9 |
1 |
Barissever Osman |
1688 |
TUR |
4 |
15,25 |
10 |
9 |
Seker Cuneyt |
1760 |
TUR |
2½ |
6,25 |
11 |
6 |
Özdogan Abdullah |
1665 |
TUR |
1½ |
6,75 |
12 |
3 |
Goksin Mehmet |
1501 |
TUR |
1½ |
4,75 |
Unfortunately the games are not easily available. They are in the possession
of the organisers. If we can get hold of them we will add a link to this article.
The tournament atmosphere, sometimes covered with the sounds of classic music
coming from the hall of the Malpas Hotel, truly improved the participants results.

The arbiter shares sweets with the players….anything to make people feel
good!

The playing hall in Malpas Hotel

The winner of the tournament, Julian Baltag (2350) from Moldova

WGM Elena Partac, the second place in the tournament

Moldavian WGM Karolina Smokina, third place

Concentated from the first moves, with black Atasin Tarik, multiple champion
of North Cyprus, 4th place in the tournament

Here we are…the participants of the event, with the Moldavian players in
front

And if you really have an unfulfilled wish, you can come to the Tree of Wishes,
to the branches of which you can attach a strip of clothing with your wish on
it. It will surely became true…believe me.
About the author
Elena Partac, born on 25th March 1984, is a Woman Grandmaster and member
of the Moldova Olympic Chess, for which she has played in three Olympiads.
Elena won the Woman Chess Champion of Moldova three times.
Elena will be graduating at the University, Faculty of Journalism and
Public Relations, in two weeks! She is also the director of the Moldavian
Chess Federation web site. Elena tells us that she fell in love with
chess when she was five years old.
[Photo: Pufichek]
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Addendum
Dimitris Skyrianoglou, chief editor of the Greek chess magazine "Skaki
gia olous" (Chess for All), sent us the following message:
I am writing to express my great surprise (to say the least) regarding the
article titled "North Cyprus, where all your wishes are fulfilled"
that appeared on ChessBase website. In this article WGM Elena Partac refers
to a tournament that took place in "North Cyprus". The article was
also accompanied by a map showing the "borders" and main cities
of this "country". The problem with all this is that there is no
country or state named "North Cyprus". The only state existing on
the island of Cyprus is the Republic of Cyprus. It is a member of EU and recognized
by UN. The northern part of the island was occupied after the Turkish invasion
in 1974 and remains under occupation since then. The same applies for the
so called Chess Federation of North Cyprus. Officially it is not recognized
by FIDE!
In order not to get a wrong impression about my motives and intensions,
I would like to inform you that I have visited Cyprus (including the northern
occupied part) several times. I have played chess there, I have met several
players from the northern part of Cyprus, I have some good friends among them
and I have also host some of them in Greece (it was last summer at the tournament
of Ikaria). However, whenever I faced all these players on the board they
all stated that they are Cypriots (with a Turkish origin – Turk Cypriots).
Most, if not all of them, hold Cypriot passports and they travel to Greece
and elsewhere as Cypriots. This is because most of them feel Cypriots and
because there is not any other recognized state on the island.
On the other hand I acknowledge that at the north part of Cyprus, chess
activity is quite intense and people seem to really love and enjoy the game.
This is beyond doubt. However all this activity takes place in the occupied
area of the Republic of Cyprus at the northern part of the island and not
in "North Cyprus", which is a non-existent entity...
A few other voices:
Enver Tatlicioglu of Clemson, SC, USA wrote:
I was reading the article by WGM Elena Partac. It is nicely written with wonderful
pictures. I just have a correction: the players that are said to be Turkish
are actually citizens of a country named North Cyprus Turkish Republic (yes,
in fact they are Turkish origin). Since this country – I call it a country
because they have their own government and they have their own elections to
choose their president – is not recognized by the rest of the world.
Since this is a highly political issue I will understand if you do not mention
this fact.
Loukas, Zahilas, Athens, Greece
I am really surprised with the article on chess in 'Northern Cyprus'. I will
try to comment it the easy way. You have a young, promising and attractive
Moldavian grandmaster who parallel to her chess career wants to become a Journalist
and Public Relations professional. Please inform this lady that Northern Cyprus
is not only a dream place for chess players but also the settlement of 40.000
Turkish soldiers who divide an island that used to be a 'paradise' before
1974. I don't know if Elena has her own view of the world, but according to
the United Nations understanding, in Cyprus you can only find one recognised
nation, the Democracy of Cyprus.
Wikipedia tells us the following:
Cyprus, officially the Republic of Cyprus, is a Eurasian island country in
the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea, south of Turkey (Anatolia). It is
the third-largest island in the Mediterranean and one of the most popular tourist
destinations there, attracting over 2.4 million tourists per year. A former
British colony, it gained independence from the United Kingdom in 1960 and became
a Commonwealth republic in 1961. The Republic of Cyprus is a developed country
and has been a member of the European Union since 1 May 2004.
In 1974, following a period of violence between Greek and Turkish Cypriots
and an attempted Greek Cypriot coup sponsored by the Greek military junta of
that period, Turkey invaded and occupied one-third of the island. This led to
the displacement of thousands of Cypriots and the establishment of a separate
Turkish Cypriot political entity in the north. This event and its resulting
political situation is a matter of ongoing dispute.
The Republic of Cyprus, the internationally recognized state, has de jure
sovereignty over the island of Cyprus and surrounding waters. However, the island
is de facto partitioned into four main parts:
- the area under the effective control of the Republic of Cyprus in the south
of the island;
- the area in the north, styling itself the Turkish Republic of Northern
Cyprus;
- the United Nations-controlled Green Line, separating the two; and
- two Sovereign Base Areas (Akrotiri and Dhekelia), over which the United
Kingdom retained jurisdiction after Cypriot independence.
Read more about Cyprus here.
And about Northern Cyprus here.