The Morning Call

Macedonia OKs deal to call self North Macedonia

Vote paves way to NATO and better ties with Greece

- By Konstantin Testorides and Nicholas Paphitis

SKOPJE, Macedonia — Macedonia late Friday fulfilled its part of a historic deal that will pave its way to NATO membership and normalize relations with neighborin­g Greece, after lawmakers approved constituti­onal changes to rename the country North Macedonia.

The move was hailed by NATO and the European Union, which had lobbied heavily for Macedonia to back the agreement despite strong criticism from the country’s main opposition party, and by Greece’s prime minister who has invested heavily in the deal.

All 81 Macedonian lawmakers present for the parliament­ary vote backed the constituti­onal amendments. The remaining 39 opposition lawmakers in the 120-seat house stayed away in protest.

Prime Minister Zoran Zaev told lawmakers the deal was a “tough” but necessary decision for his country. The vote followed intense negotiatio­ns between Zaev’s center-left coalition and some opposition lawmakers, who had initially agreed to back the agreement but raised last-minute objections.

“A better deal could not be reached, and without an agreement with Greece there will be no NATO and European Union (membership),” Zaev said.

The agreement on changing the name comes after a 27-year dispute with Greece, which complained that this small, landlocked country calling itself Macedonia implied claims on Greece’s own territory and cultural heritage. Macedonian leaders denied that.

The deal encountere­d strong opposition on both sides of the border, with critics on each side saying it offered too many concession­s to the other side.

NATO leader Jens Stoltenber­g said the alliance strongly supports the full implementa­tion of the agreement, under which Greece will lift its objections to Macedonia joining NATO and the EU.

Stoltenber­g said in a tweet Friday that the agreement is “an important contributi­on to a stable and prosperous region.”

The West sees Macedonia’s NATO accession as a key step toward limiting Russian influence in the region. For the agreement to come into effect, Greece’s parliament must now convene in coming weeks to ratify it — a tricky task for Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras who faces strong opposition to the agreement from his junior coalition partner.

Tsipras spoke with Zaev on Friday to congratula­te him after the vote, the Greek prime minister’s office said.

Hundreds of Macedonian opposition supporters protested peacefully in front of parliament for a third day, demanding early elections and the dissolutio­n of parliament. They greeted the vote result with cries of “traitors.”

 ?? BORIS GRDANOSKI/AP ?? Hundreds of Macedonian opposition supporters protest the change peacefully in front of parliament for a third day, demanding early elections and the dissolutio­n of parliament.
BORIS GRDANOSKI/AP Hundreds of Macedonian opposition supporters protest the change peacefully in front of parliament for a third day, demanding early elections and the dissolutio­n of parliament.

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