The Citizen (KZN)

Albanian census starts tug-of-war over identity

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Pustec – A census in Albania has opened up a new front in the long-running row between Balkan neighbours Bulgaria and North Macedonia.

Both claim Albania’s dwindling Macedonian minority as their own.

The tug-of-war over identity is something of an unequal fight, say locals, with those who opt to become Bulgarian getting a prized EU passport.

Sofia and Skopje have been at loggerhead­s for decades over language, identity and history.

Bulgaria has blocked North Macedonia’s path to EU membership while at the same time giving passports to some 90 000 Macedonian­s – around one in 20 of the population – since it joined the bloc.

The latest row centres on a group of dying Macedonian-speaking villages in one of the most beautiful corners of southeaste­rn Albania, on the shores of Lake Prespa, hard by the border with Greece and North Macedonia.

On Pustec’s mostly empty streets, signs are written both in Albanian and Macedonian. But many homes and buildings are derelict, with cracked walls, peeling paint and broken windows.

Like much of rural Albania, the young have left to seek a better life, with locals saying the population has plummeted from 3 300 in 2011 to just 1 200.

Ahead of Albania’s census late last year, some of its tiny Macedonian community said they came under increasing pressure to identify as Bulgarians – an accusation firmly rejected by Sofia.

“The possibilit­y to get an European passport has strongly affected the Macedonian community,” said Vasil Sterjovski, of the Macedonian Alliance for European Integratio­n party, which represents many of Albania’s Macedonian­s.

With the census results due in the next few months, Pustec’s primary school director Trajan Vangjelovs­ki lamented that “it has become a battlefiel­d for inter-ethnic conflicts between Bulgaria and North Macedonia.”

Like much of the Balkans, the area’s history is complex. From 1912 to 1945, Albania considered its inhabitant­s Bulgarians.

But after the end of World War II and the birth of the Macedonian republic within Yugoslavia, Albania classified them as Macedonian­s, according to Tirana-based internatio­nal relations expert Ardi Bido.

However, things changed in 2017 when Albania began recognisin­g an ethnic Bulgarian minority.

For decades, Skopje “denied the existence of a Bulgarian community not only in North Macedonia, but also in Albania,” the Bulgarian embassy in Albania said.

“In the past [Albanian Bulgarians] did not have this opportunit­y and for many it was a logical choice to declare themselves as Macedonian­s, given the common cultural and historical background,” the statement added.

Their decision must be respected, the embassy argued.

In the past four years, nearly 4 000 Albanian citizens have received Bulgarian travel documents, according to Bulgaria’s justice ministry.

Back in Pustec, the issue continues to sow discord.

“People are worried, confused and disoriente­d,” said the school administra­tor Vangjelovs­ki.

“They no longer know whether they should feel like Bulgarians or Macedonian­s.” –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? BULGARIANS OR MACEDONIAN­S? A man and a woman chat as she leads a donkey along a street in the village of Pustec, southeaste­rn Albania, recently.
Picture: AFP BULGARIANS OR MACEDONIAN­S? A man and a woman chat as she leads a donkey along a street in the village of Pustec, southeaste­rn Albania, recently.

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