Arab Times

‘Deal on name row still far’:

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Greece said on Tuesday it was “far away” from resolving a decades-long dispute over Macedonia’s name despite progress in talks between the two neighbours.

The row erupted in 1991 when Macedonia declared independen­ce from Yugoslavia as it disintegra­ted. Greece refuses to recognise it under the name Macedonia, saying this implies a territoria­l claim on a northern Greek region of the same name, and has blocked its efforts to join NATO and the European Union.

“In our continuing talks with our neighbours, there has been significan­t progress but we are still far away from concluding negotiatio­ns and reaching an agreement,” government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopou­los told a press briefing.

The prime ministers of Greece and Macedonia are expected to meet in neighbouri­ng Bulgaria on Thursday on the sidelines of an EU-Western Balkans summit.

Tzanakopou­los said the meeting would be “very useful and important” but the two countries might need a new round of talks to resolve the dispute.

Athens and Skopje decided last year to renew their efforts to try to reach a settlement well before the summer.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras hopes a resolution would increase his political leverage in Europe while boosting his popularity at home, where many Greeks feel the country’s debt crisis and three huge bailouts have compromise­d its sovereignt­y.

Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev, who came to power a year ago, hopes to boost his fragile coalition with a deal that would also open up the path to EU and NATO membership for the tiny landlocked Balkan country. (RTRS)

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