I am no expert but it might be a European Honey Buzzard, a type of Kite. There doesn't seem to be enough white at the front to be an Eagle at least not a Bonelli's.
It's a Long-legged Buzzard Buteo rufinus, you can make out the pale area on the outer edge of the wing in the 1st photo which also shows this bird's typical eagle-like soaring on lifted wings!
Thank you for the picture Max.
I would agree that it is a long legged buzzard. A few years ago when walking with my dog he alerted me to what turned out to be a very recently dead long legged buzzard beneath the high voltage lines running from the Agios Neophytos Monastery to the transmitter masts on Mellisovounos.
It had rained the previous night, and I surmised the unfortunate raptor had electrocuted itself; this was bourne out when I got the corpse home and measured the outstretched wingspan at almost six feet. It weighed in at exactly two pounds three ounces. I was anxious to freeze it, as it was a perfect specimen to be passed on to a taxidermist, but my wife vetoed that plan!
I wrote to Martin Hellicar at Birdlife Cyprus, and enclosed pictures and details for their records, as there were then I believe about six pairs breeding on the island; I used to see them more often than I do now. The Cypriots call them “the Rabbit Hawk”. Possibly the scarcity of rabbits due to over enthusiastic hunting has affected their numbers...
There might be a scarcity of rabbits in the hills, Kingfisher, but there are still plenty of hares on the fields adjacent to banana plantations on the coastal areas.
But these probably offer a more difficult choice / catch for predator v. prey?
Correction to my earlier post, prompted by Paphos Al's post- there are no wild rabbits in Cyprus, only the Cyprus Hare, [Lepus Cyprius].
Oddly, though, the hunters and butchers seem to refer to them as "rabbits",{and consequently their predator is called the "Rabbit Hawk"}.