Kuwait Times

Macedonia - the country that may change its name

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SKOPJE: A small, poor and landlocked country, Macedonia has struggled for a quarter of a century to win recognitio­n for its name despite protests from neighborin­g Greece. Today its citizens will vote on whether to rename their country “The Republic of North Macedonia” as part of a compromise with Athens, which has its own northern province called Macedonia. Here are five things to know about the Balkan state.

Name debate

Macedonia’s official name at the United Nations is the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, or FYROM, the result of its 27-year-long row with Greece. A number of countries have recognized the Balkan state under its constituti­onal name of Macedonia, including the US, Russia and even China, but not the European Union.

Deceptive flags

Macedonia is home to around two million people, mostly Orthodox Slavs and an ethnic Albanian minority that makes up around a quarter of the population. Passing through the northwest of Macedonia, a traveler might think they were in Albania. Under a 2005 accord, residents have the right to fly the red and black Albanian flag and the two headed-eagle is prevalent in a number of villages. Having avoided inter-ethnic war during the bloody break-up of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, Macedonia found itself facing conflict in 2001 when ethnic Albanian rebels launched an insurgency. Up to 200 people were killed during the seven-month conflict with Macedonian armed forces. The internatio­nally-brokered Ohrid agreement, reached in August 2001, provided greater rights for Macedonia’s Albanian minority, including powershari­ng, better representa­tion in the public sector and official status for the Albanian language.

Emigration

Macedonia is one of the poorest countries in Europe with an average salary of 400 euros ($470). A quarter of its active working age population is unemployed. Youngsters are particular­ly badly affected and many have emigrated. Authoritie­s do not have official figures on emigration and have not organized a census since 2002, but according to the World Bank about a half a million Macedonian­s-or a quarter of the population-are living abroad.

Heroes

Two historic personalit­ies make Macedonian­s especially proud: Mother Teresa and Alexander the Great. Both, however are disputed, with Mother Teresa also claimed by Albania and Alexander by Greece. Although Mother Teresa was born in Skopje under the Ottoman Empire, she was of Albanian ethnicity.

Sunshine state

The national flag is a stylised yellow sun on a red field. Macedonia boasts 280 sunny days a year, according to the Meteorolog­ical Institute. However, Macedonia is the European nation that produces the least solar energy: 0.04 percent of total production, says the Agency for Energy. The mountainou­s country is a paradise for hikers with three national parks, 50 lakes and thousands of kilometers of trails. Its cuisine-a mix of Ottoman, Mediterran­ean and Austrian-Hungarian influences-is reputed to be among the finest in the Balkans. As is its wine.

 ?? —AFP ?? SKOPJE: Two girls walk past a campaign poster reading ‘A safe future for our children’ displayed on the window of the office of the coalition that supports the ‘yes’ in the upcoming referendum on whether to change the country’s name to ‘Republic of Northern Macedonia’.
—AFP SKOPJE: Two girls walk past a campaign poster reading ‘A safe future for our children’ displayed on the window of the office of the coalition that supports the ‘yes’ in the upcoming referendum on whether to change the country’s name to ‘Republic of Northern Macedonia’.

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