The
fears over Macedonia's territorial pretensions to the homonymous Greek
province, which is the reason for Athens' veto to the country's EU and
NATO integration, are senseless, says Foreign Minister Nikola Poposki in
the interview for the web-edition of Spanish daily "El Pais".
"Macedonia has explicitly said it has no pretensions
towards any of our neighbors. Throughout the years we have accepted and
respected our commitments, demonstrating a high degree of flexibility.
We have made concessions with the flag change and constitutional
reforms. However, there are things that go against the basic democratic
principles. A country's name can only be determined by its citizens. The
language, the culture, the identity are elements that cannot be imposed
from the outside. Greece accepted one and only obligation - not to
prevent our integration in international organizations. However, it does
not abide by it", says Poposki.
He recalls that the International Court of Justice
ruled against Athens over its breach of the 1995 Interim Accord, but the
Greek stance has not changed since and the row is in a standstill.
"Unfortunately, the economic crisis spends the entire
energy of Greek leaders. There is no room for the Macedonian case. We
continue to be open for dialogue. Relations between the people are good
and the same goes for trade. Macedonia represents an opportunity, not a
threat for Greece", emphasizes Poposki.
With regards to April multiple murder near Smilkovci
Lake, the FM says the case produced numerous consequences due to its
brutality.
"Certain individuals want to create interethnic
and inter-religious tensions through terrorist activities. If seen in
perspective, there is no political force in the country that supports
such strategy. We cannot exclude the possibility there will be
individuals who promote the radical agenda in the future. However, there
is no political ground for such support. Situation can vary in
neighboring countries, but in essence, the agenda of radical impulses is
disappearing in the region", underlines FM Poposki in the "El Pais"
interview.
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