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Dancing Alexander-style, Down Under

15 March 2010 | By Sinisa-Jakov Marusic

Sinisa-Jakov Marusic The issue of national identity is taken seriously by Balkan people – including the least serious among them.


British Ambassador to Serbia Urges Cooperation
16 March 2010 | Bojana Barlovac

British Ambassador to Serbia Stephen Wordsworth said that Serbia is not being asked to recognise Kosovo's independence, but argued that Belgrade must establish a model of cooperation with Pristina.

EU Enlargement Commissioner to Visit Western Balkans
16 March 2010 | Bojana Barlovac

EU Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fuele is set to begin his first Western Balkans tour on Wednesday, with scheduled stops in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania and Kosovo.

Koricanske stijene: Destroyed Life
16 March 2010 |

After accepting a guilt admission agreement, the Trial Chamber has scheduled sentencing of Ljubisa Cetic, who is charged with shooting civilians at Koricanske stijene, for March 11.



Macedonia’s “Baby Boom” Program Falls In Court

Skopje | 02 April 2009 |
 

The government’s policy aimed at boosting the country’s population growth by giving cash bonuses to mothers with more than one child has crumbled before the Constitutional Court, on the grounds that it is discriminatory. 

The court ruled on Wednesday that the government’s provisions in the child protection law, envisaging state benefits only for mothers that live in municipalities where the annual birth rate is below 2.1 children per 1000 people, cannot stand.

From now on, all mothers living in the entire territory of Macedonia who give birth to a second, third or fourth child, will start receiving money from the government.

The Constitutional Court’s decision “reflects the spirit of the multi-ethnic, multi-cultural and multi-confessional character of the state”, civic association Wake Up said today in a statement. This association was responsible for bringing the initiative before the Constitutional Court.

According to them and other local NGOs, the government programme as originally envisaged discriminated against the ethnic Albanian community, since the municipalities with low birth rates are predominately those with majority Macedonian and other non-Albanian populations. Macedonia’s Helsinki Committee also condemned the government programme as being ‘selective’.

Last month the Court also banned similar provisions in the health insurance law that only applied to some municipalities. 

The conservative VMRO-DPMNE’s proposal stipulated that, starting from this year, parents in municipalities with a low birth rate will receive state support of around €90 for their second offspring for the first nine months. If they decide to have a third child, they are eligible for €120 support over a ten year period. Should a couple have four children, they will receive about €190 euros for 15 years.

However, only two municipalities with an Albanian majority fulfilled the birth rate requirements, with the rest populated mainly with Macedonians. 

Reporting by Sinisa-Jakov Marusic



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Comments:
BAIL-OUT
2009-04-02 14:31:24
Don't worry. Albanians will BAIL-OUT the program, even without cash support

Freedom To Albanians
2009-04-02 15:11:11
Freedom to all albanian population in skopje

Albanianisation
2009-04-03 06:42:53
The only way to motivate the people to have children is by providing prosperity and a certain future. How long wil the Makedonski put up with Gruevski's failures..?

discriminatory!
2009-04-03 07:34:30
"discriminatory"! hahaha How stupid is this Constitutional Court? Is this Court in Macedonia. Any normal person would laugh at the accusement of this being "discriminatory".

God bless Albanians
2009-04-03 07:52:51
History will always regulate things the way they always been. In order for all of us albanians to prevail we neeed to turn to our old faith, then we will become one of the superpowers in the world. Who doesn't believe this should read the history of Spain


2009-04-03 15:48:22
It's a shame that the Albanians and the Bulgarians in FYROM can't get along. Really

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