Macedonia targeted for not joining anti-Russia bans: Russia FM

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Sat May 16, 2015 3:32PM

A man and his family leave the conflict area near a police checkpoint in 
Kumanovo, northern Macedonia, May 9, 2015. (© AFP)

 

Russia says the recent deadly terrorist attack in Macedonia was a reaction to 
the Balkan country’s refusal to join anti-Russian sanctions.

“Objectively speaking, the events in Macedonia are unfolding against the 
background of the government’s refusal to join the policy of sanctions against 
Russia,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said during his visit to Serbia 
on Friday.

“We can’t help but feeling [sic] that there is some sort of connection here,” 
he added.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (L) shakes hands with his Serbian 
counterpart, Ivica Dacic, during their meeting in Belgrade, May 15, 2015. (© 
AFP)

 

Lavrov said the European Union (EU) is trying to conceal the realities behind 
Macedonia’s incident so as not to admit the failure of the 28-member bloc’s 
policies to stabilize the Balkan region.

The EU “should not play ostrich and try to present the case as if there were no 
organizational force behind it,” he said, adding, “We are seriously concerned 
that those were the result of a well-planned terrorist act.”

Earlier in the day, the Russian Foreign Ministry also blamed the West for 
“masterminding” the terrorist attack.

The West seeks to “destabilize the political situation in that country and 
plunge it into the abyss of a colored revolution,” read the statement issued by 
the ministry.

A woman holding her child walks in their destroyed house in Kumanovo, 
Macedonia, on May 12, 2015. (© AFP)

 

“This also proves that Western masterminds of such catastrophic scenarios 
prefer proxies for implementing them, using citizens of countries like 
Montenegro, which were tempted by NATO lures, in Ukraine and now in Macedonia,” 
the statement added, referring to the recent detention of a Montenegro national 
in connection with the terrorist incident.

Last week, eight police officers and 14 gunmen were killed in two days of 
clashes in the Diva Naselba neighborhood in the northern Macedonian town of 
Kumanovo.

According to Ivo Kotevski, the Macedonian Interior Ministry spokesman, the 
uniforms of the gunmen bore the insignia of the Albanian Kosovo Liberation Army 
(UCK).

The armed men had entered the Balkan country earlier in the month in an attempt 
to carry out terrorist attacks, Kotevski added.

The Kumanovo clashes came two weeks after a police watchtower on Macedonia’s 
northern border with Kosovo was attacked by 40 gunmen.

A Ukrainian soldier holds an ax as he rides on an armored personnel carrier 
near Artemivsk, eastern Ukraine, February 22, 2015. (© AFP)

 

The Moscow-West relations drastically deteriorated after Ukraine’s Black Sea 
peninsula of Crimea joined the Russian Federation following a referendum in 
March 2014.

Relations were strained further after Ukraine launched military operations in 
mid-April 2014 to silence the pro-Russia protests in the country’s mainly 
Russian-speaking regions in eastern Ukraine.

NATO, the European Union and the US accuse Moscow of involvement in the chaotic 
situation in eastern Ukraine and have imposed a series of sanctions against 
Russian and pro-Russia figures. Moscow, however, rejects the allegation.

FNR/KA/HMV 

http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/05/16/411351/Macedonia-Russia-Lavrov-EU-Terrorist-Ukraine

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