Ciloven Accord
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The Ciloven Accord was an attempt international settlement negotiated in 1994 between the Republic of Alquiya and the Kingdom of Trjebia (also known as the Former Kingdom of Trjebia or FKT) to deal with the status of Trjebia and the Trjebian dispute. The accord was drafted at the Ciloven Summit in Ciloven, Seketan, with the Seketese government acting as mediator. The agreement included a timeline on intigrating the FKT and Southern Trjebia economically and diplomatically, as well as settling the naming dispute between the two.
Upon the agreements release it was met with large backlash from both countries. In Alquiya, the Southern Trjebian states of Lower Trjebia and Upper Trjebia protested the agreement due to its perception as an attempt to annex the staunchly republican territories into the royalist Kingdom. Some more radical local leaders like Sebastian Po and Michael Kam aquated the deal to a "cultural massacure" of Southern Trjebia's unique culture and way of life, and would eventually form the Trjebian Rights Assoceation as a Southern Trjebian rights party. In the FKT the deal was met with more support, with the legislature ratifying the agreement by a large margin and a plebiscite passing 55%-45%. However the royal family and King Henri IV, who still hold considerable power, refused to sign the accord due to its demotion of their titles and the recognition of the republican Southern Trjebia's as a distinct group.