The European Commission has appointed Executive Vice President Raffaele Fitto as its special representative for Cyprus, giving the senior Italian official a role in efforts to resolve the long-running Cyprus issue.
Why it matters: The move gives the European Commission a designated senior political representative focused on the Cyprus issue.
- Fitto’s mandate is explicitly tied to the UN framework and efforts to create the conditions for negotiations to resume.
- His role will also focus on building trust among stakeholders and interlocutors involved in the process.
What he’s saying: “I am honoured to have been designated by the EU Commission as its Special Representative for Cyprus,” Fitto said, thanking Commission President Ursula von der Leyen for her trust.
- Fitto said he remains “fully committed to supporting the UN-led process” and working closely with the UN secretary-general’s personal envoy.
- His goal, he added, will be to “help create the conditions for the resumption of negotiations and support a comprehensive and lasting settlement,” including through confidence-building among stakeholders.
The big picture: The Commission is framing Fitto’s role as support for the existing UN-led process rather than a separate diplomatic track.
- His appointment adds a senior EU-level political figure to efforts aimed at restarting negotiations and pursuing a lasting settlement.
The bottom line: Fitto’s new mandate puts the Commission more directly into the diplomatic effort around Cyprus, with a clear focus on supporting the UN process, rebuilding trust and creating conditions for negotiations to resume.



