Greeks fight use of name Macedonia
GREECE: Well over 100,000 protesters from across Greece converged yesterday on Athens’ main square to protest a potential Greek compromise in a dispute with neighbouring Macedonia over the former Yugoslav republic’s official name.
Hundreds of chartered buses brought protesters in from around the country to the Greek capital, while more people arrived on ferries from the islands. Traffic was blocked throughout the city centre and three major subway stops were closed.
Chanting ‘‘Hands off Macedonia!’' and ‘‘Macedonia belongs to Greece!’' the protesters converged on Syntagma Square in front of parliament, many waving flags bearing the Star of Vergina, the emblem of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia.
Police officials estimated the attendance at 140,000. Organisers, who claimed 1.5 million were at the rally, used a crane to raise a massive Greek flag over the square.
‘‘We are trying to show the politicians . . . that they must not give up the name ‘Macedonia’,’' said 55-year-old protester Manos Georgiou.
In Skopje, a spokesman for the Macedonian government said he did not know whether his government would react to the rally. Macedonian opposition leader Hristijan Mickoski said the rally hurt the prospects of a deal on the name issue.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras was dismissive of the event. ‘‘The overwhelming majority of the Greek people . . . irrespective of their opinions [on the issue] agree that major foreign policy issues cannot be solved through fanaticism and intolerance.’'
Tsipras used the occasion to attack Greek opposition leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis and his fellow conservative, former Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, for allegedly trying to use the rally for their advantage.
About 700 Left-wing and anarchist protesters set up a counter-demonstration nearby, bearing banners calling for Balkan unity. Dozens of riot police were deployed to keep the two demonstrations separate.
Suspected far-Right supporters attempted to attack the counterdemonstration, but were prevented by police who used stun grenades and tear gas to hold them back.
The name dispute broke out after Macedonia gained independence from Yugoslavia in 1991. The country is recognised by international institutions as the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
Many Greeks refer to it by the name of its capital, Skopje. Greece argues use of the name implies territorial claims on its own province of Macedonia, home of one of the most famous ancient Greeks, Alexander the Great.
About 100,000 people attended a similar protest last month in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki, the capital of Greece’s province of Macedonia.