Cocked rifles and infrared cameras along Cyprus buffer zone stoke tensions that could spread farther

A U.N. Peacekeeper stands at the abandoned building inside the U.N. controlled buffer zone in the central of the divided capital, Nicosia, Cyprus, Tuesday, June 18, 2024. Fifty years after war cleaved Cyprus along ethnic lines, tensions are rekindling along the 180-kilometer-long buffer zone separating Turkish Cypriots from Greek Cypriots. It's another potential source of instability in an already tumultuous region. (AP Photo/Petros Karadjias)

NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — The clang of unseen assault rifles being cocked carries across the United Nations-controlled buffer zone in ethnically cleaved Cyprus, ratcheting up concerns that the embers of the island's stagnant conflict could again be rekindled.

The rifles are just the tip of a string of recent escalations by Turkish Cypriots and Greek Cypriots, rivals separated along the 180-kilometer (120-mile) buffer zone that snakes through the capital’s medieval center.

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