Might the question of what to call Macedonia finally be resolved?

 

IT WAS a veritable tale of two cities. On February 4th Macedonians ambled around the centre of their capital, Skopje, enjoying a quiet Sunday. Athens, meanwhile, was jammed with protesters against any compromise in the 27-year-old dispute about what Greece will accept as a name for its northern neighbour. The organisers claimed a crowd of 1.5m; the police put it at a still-impressive 140,000. After a flurry of diplomatic activity, a deal could be struck within weeks. If so, it would be a huge breakthrough—and put pressure on the other Balkan states to solve their own disputes with their neighbours.

The roots of the conflict run deep. When the Ottoman Turks were driven from the region in 1912, Macedonia was carved up by Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria. The bits grabbed by Serbia ended up as part of the new Yugoslavia. When Yugoslavia collapsed in 1991, Greece objected to that part of it being recognised as the Macedonian republic, arguing that this implied a continuing claim to its own region of the same name. From then on Greece, the...Continue reading

Souce: Europe http://ift.tt/2ElZGI3

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