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Greece’s Papandreou: No Secret Name Talks July 10, 2010

Posted by Yilan in Macedonia, Yunanistan.
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There are no secret name talks between Macedonia and Greece, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou told media after meeting in New York with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

After meeting the UN chief on Tuesday, Papandreou explained that the recently adopted practice of more frequent face-to-face meetings with his Macedonian counterpart Nikola Gruevski does not mean that there are efforts for secret diplomacy outside the framework of the UN led talks.

“These are not secret, but rather open and public initiatives for finding a solution within the framework of the UN-led negotiations,” Papandreou said.

The most recent Gruevski-Papandreou meeting took place last week in Brussels. At the European Council summit held there Greece once again said it will not allow Macedonia to start EU accession talks prior to solving the long standing name spat.

Papandreou reiterated Athens’ red lines: if Macedonia is to be part of the country’s name it must be accompanied by a geographic qualifier that will be used for all purposes. Athens argues that the country’s official name, Republic of Macedonia, implies territorial claims towards its own northern province, which is also called Macedonia.

In an unrelated event British Minister for Europe David Lidington, speaking yesterday in Skopje, encouraged talks between Macedonia and Greece.

“I hope this will soon lead to the successful settlement of the problem,” he said. Lindington was speaking at a joint press conference with his host, Macedonian Minister for European Affairs Vasko Naumovski.

Athens and Skopje have been locked in the name dispute for 18 years. The spat escalated in 2008 when Greece blocked Macedonia’s entry to NATO, citing the unresolved bilateral issue. Last autumn the European Commission recommended the start of accession talks with Macedonia but Greece blocked this move as well pending a solution to the name dispute.

Nationalist Grants Sentenced Macedonian Mother EP Job to spread propaganda July 10, 2010

Posted by Yilan in Bulgaria, Macedonia.
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Bulgaria: Nationalist Grants Sentenced Bulgarian-Macedonian Mother  EP Job
The Bulgarian-Macedonian Spaska Mitrova, who has been recently delivered with 9 months suspended sentence, will work as an assistant in the

The Macedonian with Bulgarian passport Spaska Mitrova will join the European Parliament as an assistant to the MEP from the far-right nationalist party “AtakaDimitar Stoyanov.

Mitrova became publicly known for 3-month imprisonment and her year-long trials over custody rights. Her case fired a huge debate between Bulgaria and Macedonia. Many Bulgarians have participated in protests against her imprisonment because they believed the case was politically motivated.

The young woman’s new position has been announced Thursday after her meeting with the “Ataka” leader Volen Siderov at the Parliament in Sofia.

“In addition to her job with “Ataka”, we will make sure she receives a legal protection by our MP and lawyer, Yavor Notev, and by other lawyers too. As a Bulgarian citizen, Spaska is entitled to have a Bulgarian lawyer,” Siderov said.

Mitrova has graduated with a major in “English philology” from the Southwestern University in the Bulgarian city of Blagoevgrad “Neofit Rilski”. Her job in the European Parliament will be to consult Stoyanov on Macedonian issues.

Stoyanov has met Spaska two weeks ago. In his words, people who admit their Bulgarian origin in Macedonia face problems.

“This is a continuing problem at the moment and is connected to the Macedonia’s membership in the EU. I invited Spaska Mitrova to be my assistant in the EP. I am a member of the inter-parliamentary delegation between the EU and the Macedonian Parliament and I invited her to consult me on issues regarding Macedonia’s progress for its membership in the EU,” he said.

The European MPs have at their disposal a budget of EUR 17 500 per month to pay their collaborators or other consultants. There is no restriction for the number of collaborators and the salaries are defined by the MP him/herself.

Spaska Mitrova lives in Macedonia, holds a Bulgarian passport and perceives herself as Bulgarian. She was sentenced and served time in a Macedonian prison over charges she did not allow her husband to see their daughter Suzanna. She was released on parole, but then the parental rights case began. Mitrova has been the cause of diplomatic scandal between the two countries in 2009.

On March 11, the Court in the Macedonian town of Gevgeli ruled to give custody rights to the father of 3-year old Suzanna and Mitrova’s estranged husband, Serbian Voislav Savic.

Only days ago, the Macedonian Court in the town of Kavadarzi has delivered Mitrova with 9 months suspended sentence and 2 years probation period. In addition to the sentence, the Court ordered her to pay the expenses for the trial.

The Prosecutor stated that Mitrova mocked the court when saying the judge was part of UDBA and asked her for sexual favors and by accusing another magistrate of throwing hysterical insults about Mitrova’s Bulgarian background.

Mitrova firmly rejects the latest accusations, explaining that the use of “udbashi” had not been her own, she just quoted someone else.

Turkey sides with Macedonia in name dispute July 10, 2010

Posted by Yilan in Macedonia, Turkey.
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Turkey is supporting Macedonia on the road to NATO and the EU, as well as in its name dispute with Greece.

This is according to Turkish Ambassador to Skopje Arslan Hakan Okcal, who pointed out in his farewell speech at the parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee that Ankara “believes in Macedonia’s role in the Balkans and Europe”.

The ambassador also stressed that Turkey supported Skopje in the dispute with Athens regarding the former Yugoslav republic’s constitutional name, the Republic of Macedonia.

In April 2008, Greece blocked Macedonia’s accession into NATO until the dispute over its name has been resolved. Macedonia is also an EU candidate, but accession negotiations still have not begun due to the dispute.

Greece claims that the name Macedonia refers to the ancient northern Greek province. The UN has been unsuccessfully mediating in the dispute that has been ongoing for almost two decades.

In the early 1990’s, Skopje became a UN member under the temporary name of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM).

Greece PM says willing to solve Macedonia name dispute July 10, 2010

Posted by Yilan in Macedonia, Yunanistan.
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Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou on Wednesday expressed his willingness to resolve problems with Macedonia.

Papandreou, who is also foreign minister, said Greece was ready to find a shared solution to a problem they had with Macedonia about the country’s name. He said this would be an important symbol for the region.

Speaking at summits of the Southeast European Cooperation Process, or SEECP, and the Southeast European Culture Corridors in Istanbul, Papandreou said important steps had been made in the region on the way to democratization, human rights, countering corruption and supremacy of law. However, Papandreou underlined that some political and social problems still continued in the region.

The Greek prime minister said the implementation pace of the reforms was not satisfactory every time and everywhere. “We need a new dynamism in the accession process. The future of this region is within the EU,” he said.

Referring to his country’s support for Turkey’s EU bid, Papandreou said their target and vision were to make all countries in the Balkans part of the European family. Commenting on problems between Greece and Macedonia, Papandreou said Macedonian Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski launched initiatives pertaining to problems between the two countries.

“They made new steps for the solution of our problems. Of course, the U.N. mediation process played an important role, and we are ready for a solution that can be accepted by the two parties,” he said.

Macedonian Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski, who also addressed the summit, said everybody should be respected in Europe without considering their ethnic identity and religion. He said new cultural bridges could be built by focusing on similarities, not differences.

Referring to the importance of finding a solution to disagreements in the region through peaceful means, Gruevski said: “We may open a new page in that case. This will open an area of peace and carry us to success.” Gruevski said Macedonia considered peace and stability as inseparable.

“We should definitely cooperate if we want to form a common future and be a part of a broader Europe,” he said. Referring to disagreements between Macedonia and Greece, Gruevski said peoples of the two countries had been living together for thousands of years.

The irresponsible neighbor July 9, 2010

Posted by Yilan in Macedonia, Yunanistan.
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Greek profligacy hits Bulgaria and Macedonia

By Richard W. Rahn

Mugshot

Whether you are a homeowner or a country, it is better to have responsible rather than irresponsible neighbors.

Two of Greece’s neighbors are Macedonia and Bulgaria. The Greek financial crisis is causing pain in both neighboring countries, but much more so in Macedonia. The OHRID Institute, a Macedonian free-market policy organization, and the Vienna, Austria-based Hayek Institute sponsored a conference in Skopje, Macedonia, last week, in which local and international government officials, private business leaders and scholars met to discuss the global financial situation and its impact on the Balkans.

Macedonia was part of Yugoslavia, having achieved its independence in 1991, yet its neighbor Greece continues to punish Macedonia for totally irrelevant historical events. The present land of Macedonia has been occupied by many peoples over the past few thousand years. In the popular mind, it is most often associated with Alexander the Great and his father Philip (who was actually born in modern-day Bulgaria).

The Greeks have an emotional attachment to the name and have a bordering province also named Macedonia, even though Slavic people have been the majority population for the last 1,300 years in the land that is now the country of Macedonia. Despite this, when Macedonia declared its independence from Serbia, the Greeks insisted that it could not be called Macedonia, and thus it was admitted to the United Nations with the name of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) – a rather awkward name for a country – which the Macedonians have refused to accept.

Most countries of the world, including the U.S., now recognize Macedonia by its chosen name, the Republic of Macedonia, but the Greeks continue to resist. The Greeks have blocked Macedonia’s entrance into NATO and its full membership in the EU. (Any member state can blackball any new potential member in these and some other international organizations.) The “name dispute,” however, has not kept Greece and Macedonia from actively trading with each other and engaging in normal commercial relationships, including considerable Greek investment in Macedonia. Yet the Greeks have put Macedonia in a jam because it is landlocked and also locked out of NATO and the EU. And now, the Greek financial crisis has resulted in a major drop in exports (12 percent of its traditional market) from Macedonia to Greece.

Bulgaria, which shares a border with Greece and Macedonia, is faring much better. It is a member of both NATO and the EU. While Greece has allowed its deficit-to-GDP number to rise to an unsustainable 125 percent, Bulgaria’s debt-to-GDP ratio is one of the lowest in the world at only 15 percent. Eurozone members are supposed to keep their debt-to-GDP ratios below 60 percent. (Note: France, Germany, Italy, Spain and most of the other countries are in excess of that ratio, and thus are in no position to bail out the others.) Bulgaria is not yet fully on the euro even though its currency is pegged to it. Bulgaria has been running low deficits, but only in recent weeks has it allowed its deficit to rise above 3 percent. It can correct this with modest spending-rate reductions, provided the government shows more firmness and guts on the fiscal front.

In recent years, Bulgaria has achieved (up to this global recession) a very respectable, real per-capita economic growth rate of a bit more than 6 percent. Macedonia has not done as well, but even so has achieved a five-year compound annual growth rate of 4.7 percent. Both Macedonia and Bulgaria have continued economic reforms and are moving towards more economic freedom, unlike Greece. Bulgaria has benefited from having a highly active free-market policy organization – the Institute for Market Economics (IME) – which has been aggressive in promoting free-market reform.

Macedonia has greatly picked up its free-market-oriented reform effort during the last three years and has brought down the size of government to about 33 percent of GDP. A major reason for the faster economic growth rates in Macedonia and Bulgaria, as contrasted with stagnant Greece, is that both countries have adopted flat-rate income-tax regimes of 10 percent on both personal and corporate taxes. Greece, by contrast, has a maximum tax rate of 40 percent, which is now slated to go even higher as part of the international agreement for the financial rescue. Why anyone thinks the Greeks will now pay their taxes when the rate goes above 40 percent, given that they were unwilling to pay taxes at the current rate defies common sense and economic logic.

Both Macedonia and Bulgaria have tolerated too much corruption for many years, but the level of corruption in these countries is modest by Greek standards. Some of this corruption is a legacy of the sanctions placed on Serbia in the mid-1990s, which made it very profitable to smuggle goods through Macedonia and Bulgaria to Serbia – profitable enough to bribe government officials in Macedonia and Bulgaria to look the other way.

Greece, on the other hand, has received a free pass from the major countries of the EU for far too long. Its politicians lied for years about the fiscal health of the country and provided the international community with phony numbers. The taxpayers of Europe and even those in the U.S. will have to pay more, and the people of Macedonia and Bulgaria will face a shrinkage of their markets because of Greek irresponsibility.

It is ironic that the current policies of the U.S. and a number of European governments are the same as those that got Greece in trouble – including higher marginal tax rates. Yet, the U.S. and many Western European policymakers ignore the obvious fact that low-rate, flat-tax countries that have restrained spending are doing relatively better than others with profligate policies. What will it take to wake them up?

Richard W. Rahn is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and chairman of the Institute for Global Economic Growth.