The Star Late Edition

Macedonia name deal threatens coalition

- | Reuters

THE leader of a small right-wing party threatened yesterday to pull out of Greece’s governing coalition if a deal settling a row over Macedonia’s name comes to parliament, increasing uncertaint­y in a country that just emerged from bailouts.

Leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and Panos Kammenos, leader of the Independen­t Greeks party, joined forces in 2015 with the stated aim of pulling Greece out of its then-debt crisis and fight corruption that flourished under socialist and conservati­ve rule and pushed Greece to the verge of bankruptcy.

But the new deal Tsipras’s government struck with Macedonia that changes its name to North Macedonia has shattered the coalition’s honeymoon after Greece’s bailout exit in August, refocusing attention on the coalition’s contradict­ions.

“I won’t vote for this deal if it comes to parliament,” Kammenos, who is defence minister, said.

“If the parliament­ary majority decides a divorce, so be it, there will be one,” he said, adding that his personal relationsh­ip with Tsipras remained “harmonious”.

Greek nationalis­ts have opposed the name deal, contending that Macedonia is historical­ly Greek and part of Greek heritage.

Greece maintained for 27 years that Macedonia’s name implied territoria­l claims to its northern province of the same name, and so blocked Skopje’s path to European Union and North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on (Nato) membership.

The June deal approved by Tsipras removed that obstacle, and has been embraced by both Nato and the EU.

Greece’s coalition government, whose term ends late next year, is backed by 153 lawmakers in the 300seat parliament. Kammenos’s party holds 7 seats. Tsipras has repeatedly ruled out early elections.

But Kammenos’s comments triggered heated debate, even within Tsipras’s leftist Syriza party. During a weekend meeting of its central committee, members said the partnershi­p was unravellin­g.

“It’s a big political issue when a government partner says he disagrees to the point of being forced to withdraw his confidence in the government,” senior Syriza official Panos Skourletis said yesterday.

“This is a big political mistake on his (Kammenos’s) part.”

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