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Published 18 Jan, 2018 07:05am

Greece, Macedonia in new UN bid to solve name dispute

UNITED NATIONS: Greece and Macedonia return to the United Nations on Wednesday seeking to end a 27-year dispute over the former Yugoslav republic’s name, with hopes of a compromise after a change of government in Skopje.

Greece’s objections to the use of the name Macedonia since the Balkan country’s independence in 1991 has hampered the tiny nation’s bid to join the European Union and Nato.

UN envoy Matthew Nimetz decided to sit down with diplomats from the two countries at UN headquarters after their governments showed a new willingness to end the row. “I think the people in both countries are maybe ready to hear some solutions that are consistent with national interests but also have some element of compromise that would resolve the problem,” the UN envoy said in an interview to Greek state broadcaster ERT on Monday.

In another interview, Nimetz noted that all sides had to be “realistic.”

“The name ‘Macedonia’ is in the name now, in the United Nations, and recognised by Greece with that name,” he told Antenna TV late Tuesday.

Greece maintains that the use of Macedonia suggests that Skopje has territorial claims to its own Macedonia — a northern region that boasts the port cities of Thessaloniki and Kavala, as well as the core of Alexander the Great’s ancient kingdom, a source of Greek pride.

Macedonia is known as the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) at the United Nations, but the Security Council acknowledged when it agreed to UN membership that this was a provisional name.

Asked about prospects for the talks, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric sounded a cautious note.

“These are discussions that have been going on for quite a long time.

Published in Dawn, January 18th, 2018

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