The Asian Age

Macedonia in name row with Greece

■ Greeks see territoria­l ambitions behind nameMacedo­nia ◗

- JASMINA MIRONSKI

When Macedonia declared independen­ce in 1991, the new country chose a name that evoked the past glories of its most famous claimed son, Alexander the Great.

But nearly three decades on, the decision to use the name of the ancient kingdom ruled by a general who once conquered half of known civilisati­on is hampering the fledgling nation’s place in the modern world.

Macedonia, a former Yugoslav republic home to some 2.2 million people, has fought since its inception with neighbouri­ng Greece over the name it shares with a northern Greek province.

Many Greeks fear the use of the name suggests Skopje may harbour territoria­l ambitions.

What started as a tug- oflove over a 2,400- year- old ruler — a source of great pride for both nations — has morphed into a charged political dispute holding back Skopje’s efforts to join the European Union and Nato.

Athens, a member of both, has so far blocked the bids over the name issue.

“There is no other way to join Nato without solving the name issue,” the military alliance’s chief Jens Stoltenber­g said this week on a visit to the Macedonian capital.

Known as the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia ( FYROM) at the United nations, the country elected a new government last year offering some hope of a breakthrou­gh.

Replacing a nationalis­t, right- wing administra­tion, the new ruling Social Democrats relaunched talks with Athens in a bid to settle the dispute.

This week a UN envoy said he was “very hopeful” that a solution was in reach, while Macedonia’s Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said the row could be ended “by the end of the first quarter of 2018.”

But Macedonian­s themselves are split over whether changing the name of their homeland is too high a price to pay to join the world’s largest single market and defence alliance.

Macedonia’s ethnic Albanian minority has applauded moves towards a compromise.

Greeks fear use of the name Macedonia suggests Skopje may harbour territoria­l ambitions. It has become a political dispute beween two neigbours and is blocking Skopje’s route to EU and Nato

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Alexander the Great

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