Referendum on Macedonia's name
change held amid tensions
Map of Macedonia behind a voting station in the town of Skopje.- ANSA |
Voters in Macedonia were deciding Sunday whether to accept a
landmark deal to end a decades-old dispute with neighboring Greece by changing
their country’s name to North Macedonia. The name change would pave the way to
membership of the NATO military alliance and other western institutions.
Sunday's referendum was held amid tensions as opponents fear Macedonia will
lose its sovereignty.
By Stefan J. Bos
Macedonian voters were asked Sunday: “Are you in favor
of membership in NATO and European Union by accepting the deal between (the)
Republic of Macedonia and Republic of Greece?”
Prime Minister Zoran Zaev favors the deal which involves
changing his country’s name to North Macedonia.
He claims it is the ticket to Macedonia's efforts to join
NATO and, eventually, the European Union.
Zaev cast his ballot in the southeastern town of Strumica and urged his fellow citizens to ensure Zaev cast his vote in the southeastern town of Strumica and urged his fellow citizens to ensure a strong turnout. "I believe very much that a huge, huge majority will be in favor because more than 80 percent of our citizens are in favor of the European Union and NATO, " he said.
Zaev cast his ballot in the southeastern town of Strumica and urged his fellow citizens to ensure Zaev cast his vote in the southeastern town of Strumica and urged his fellow citizens to ensure a strong turnout. "I believe very much that a huge, huge majority will be in favor because more than 80 percent of our citizens are in favor of the European Union and NATO, " he said.
He added that voters know that "this is only possible
through the agreements through the building of friendship and through the open
future for this generation but also for the next generation of our
country."
Huge majority?
The prime minister "believes very much that this huge
majority, like in every democracy, will be a concrete and precise order from
the citizens to us politicians to the MPs in the Parliament and to everybody to
follow the wish and the will of the citizens."
It was also a message "to the Parliament to go and vote
because that is the final confirmation of our future," the prime Zaev
stressed.
The June deal would end a dispute dating from the early
1990s when Macedonia declared independence from Yugoslavia. Greece had argued
that use of the name implied territorial ambitions on its own province of the
same name and blocked the country’s efforts to join NATO.
But the agreement has faced vocal opposition on both sides
of the border and critics have urged citizens to boycott’s Sunday’s
referendum.
Opponents in Macedonia include the country’s president, Gjorge Ivanov, who has called the deal a “flagrant violation of sovereignty.”
Opponents in Macedonia include the country’s president, Gjorge Ivanov, who has called the deal a “flagrant violation of sovereignty.”
Western leaders concerned
Western leaders believe however that it would be a
significant step for a country that less than two decades ago almost descended
into civil war, when parts of its ethnic Albanian minority took up arms against
the government, seeking greater rights.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and U.S. Defense Secretary
Jim Mattis were among top foreign officials heading to Skopje recently to urge
Macedonians to vote “Yes.”
For the referendum to be successful turnout needs to be 50
percent plus one vote.
There were fears Sunday that voter participation
may be low.
Commentators say a failure in the referendum would represent
the first severe blow to the policy of the pro-Western government since it took
over in May last year.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét