Setting a start date for Macedonia's EU accession talks at the European Council summit next month would speed up settlement of the Athens-Skopje name row, Macedonian Foreign Minister Antonio Milososki said.
“It would give additional momentum to the bilateral talks on the Greek problem with our name,” the foreign minister said on Thursday in Skopje. He was speaking at a debate on reforms in the Council of Europe, organised by the Euro-Balkan Institute.
Milososki argued that Macedonia deserved to get the start date from the EU, noting that last autumn the country received a positive assessment from the European Commission for the start of accession talks but was blocked by Greece over the name spat.
Getting a start date will improve the credibility of the EU, and help the country tackle interethnic problems, the foreign minister added.
“Opening the accession negotiations with the EU will mean a lot for upgrading the capacity for interethnic understanding and joining forces to move forward to build the prosperous, stable country we all long for,” Milososki said.
This month there were several violent incidents close to the border with Kosovo. During the most recent incident, police killed four armed gunmen and seized a large stash of weapons. This raised concern about deteriorating trust between the Macedonian majority and the ethnic Albanian community and of renewed violence in the country.
The foreign minister commended the latest meeting between Macedonian Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski and his Greek counterpart George Papndreou in Madrid, failing to say if the encounter had brought any progress.
Milososki said that for a compromise to be reached it would be good that the two most important political figures in both countries build mutual trust.
"Macedonia wishes for a compromise solution to be found for the name dispute. Athens promotes the proposal "Republic of Northern Macedonia', which we consider to be unilateral and thus cannot be the basis for a compromise, and thus there is a need for more flexibility in favor of the negotiating process," Milososki added.
Ever since Macedonia gained independence in 1991, its name has been the subject of a bitter dispute with southern neighbor, Greece.
The longstanding mediator between Athens and Skopje, Matthew Nimetz, rarely reveals his feelings – but admits regret that the name ‘New Macedonia’ didn’t stick.
Placing the statue of Alexander the Great in the centre of Skopje is an unintentional allegory for the end of transition in Macedonia.
The continued blockade of Macedonia’s NATO hopes - which we’re seeing once again at the Chicago summit - shows the West still prefers the principle of solidarity to obedience to international law.