Macedonian opposition leader shuns talks after Parliament riot
SKOPJE: Zoran Zaev, Macedonia’s opposition leader, rejected President Gjorge Ivanov’s call for emergency party leaders’ talks on Friday, hours after demonstrators — mostly supporters of the country’s dominant conservative party — invaded Parliament and assaulted opposition lawmakers.
An official in the Social Democrat party said Zoran Zaev would not attend the talks, but did not provide further detail.
Police said 102 people were injured, mostly lightly, in the riot.
Zaev was among the victims, as was the head of a small ethnic Albanian opposition party, and 22 police officers.
The country is in a deep political crisis that started with a wiretapping scandal more than two years ago, and inconclusive elections last year further complicated matters.
Macedonia is also increasingly divided along ethnic lines, with demonstrators protesting against opposition plans to give greater powers to the ethnic Albanian minority — a quarter of the country’s population.
The EU condemned Thursday’s violence, and said that the cornerstones of democracy should be respected. In Serbia, Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic called emergency security consultations over the unrest.
Conservative leader Nikola Gruevski also deplored the violence, but said his political opponents provoked it.
Speaking at his party headquarters, Gruevski said the Social Democrats consciously broke the country’s law and constitution by electing a new Parliament speaker — an ethnic Albanian politician — despite the months-old deadlock in efforts to form a new government.
“Greed to seize power at any cost is the direct cause which led to this adverse situation, and they bear responsibility for it,” Gruevski said.
The violence started when dozens of protesters, many masked, broke through a police cordon after the speaker’s election, shouting, throwing chairs and wielding camera tripods abandoned by startled journalists.
Police said arrests have been made, but gave no further details.
Clashes lasted for hours Thursday night, with police initially doing little to stop the invasion, and the crowd inside parliament swelled to several hundred.
Eventually, police used stun gre- nades to evacuate the building, and free lawmakers and journalists trapped inside.
Federica Mogherini, EU foreign affairs chief, said that “violence is unacceptable, even more so when it happens in the house of democracy.”
Mogherini, attending a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Malta, called the incident a “serious cri- sis that can be dangerous.”
Macedonia’s political crisis started in early 2015, when Zaev accused then-Prime Minister Gruevski of masterminding a massive illegal wiretapping operation against the judiciary, police, politicians, journalists, foreign diplomats and religious leaders.