jamestown.org <https://jamestown.org/program/the-balkans-are-heating-up-again/> 
 


The Balkans Are Heating up Again - Jamestown


6-8 minutes

  _____  

 

A protest in Skopje, North Macedonia on July 5 (Source: AP Photo/Boris 
Grdanoski)

Russia’s war on Ukraine has prompted the North Atlantic Treaty Organization 
(NATO) and the European Union to examine current security vulnerabilities in 
Europe and find a way to address them. One of the major areas of focus has been 
the Balkans, and three outstanding security problems plague this 
still-conflict-prone region: Bulgaria’s veto on North Macedonia’s EU accession, 
which indirectly also impacts Albania; unsettled relations between Serbia and 
Kosovo; and the threat of partition of Bosnia-Herzegovina if the Serb entity 
withdraws from the federal institutions, as it has announced.

An attempt by the French presidency of the Council of the EU to resolve the 
dispute between Bulgaria and North Macedonia last month backfired, leading to 
violent protests in Skopje since July 2 (Nova Makedonija 
<https://www.novamakedonija.com.mk/makedonija/kovachevski-so-osuda-za-vcherashnite-nastani-i-povik-politicharite-da-ne-gi-vovlekuvaat-gragjanite-vo-nasilni-protesti/>
 , July 7). The proposed compromise would lift Bulgaria’s blockade on North 
Macedonia’s EU accession but would also impose constitutional changes and other 
conditions that the majority of Macedonian citizens see as a betrayal of their 
national identity. A recent survey found that 56 percent of respondents (and 
72.80 percent of the interviewed ethnic Macedonians) would not accept starting 
negotiations with the EU at the price of North Macedonia agreeing to the 
“French proposal” (Vecer.mk <https://vecer.mk/makedonija/1082631/> , July 7).

As an EU member, Bulgaria has veto powers over accepting new states, which the 
previous government of Boyko Borisov imposed in November 2020. Sofia’s 
objections primarily relate to presentations of historical events and figures 
that both countries claim to belong to their historical past (EurActiv 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/enlargement/news/bulgaria-spells-out-conditions-for-unblocking-north-macedonias-eu-path/>
 , November 18, 2020). In addition, Bulgaria refuses to recognize the 
Macedonian language as fully separate from Bulgarian.

The French proposal essentially inserts bilateral disputes over history, 
identity and language into North Macedonia’s EU accession process, which is 
unprecedented in the union’s history. When Greece withdrew its objections to EU 
and NATO accession of its northern neighbor, it was done through a bilateral 
agreement (the Prespa Accord) that changed the name of Macedonia to North 
Macedonia (Vlada.mk <https://vlada.mk/node/17422> , June 17, 2018). Although 
the Prespa Accord contains many cultural, educational and linguistic changes 
that Skopje agreed to undertake, no monitoring mechanism would condition the 
country’s process of Euro-Atlantic integration. In contrast, when the Bulgarian 
parliament lifted the veto on North Macedonia’s EU accession on July 24, it 
insisted that good neighborliness remains a horizontal criterion throughout the 
entire EU negotiations of North Macedonia to the EU (BNR 
<https://bnr.bg/radiobulgaria/post/101667150/balgaria-prie-frenskoto-predlojenie-za-severna-makedonia-i-es>
 , June 24).

The government will present the proposal’s final text to the North Macedonian 
parliament on July 8. In the meantime, the opposition VMRO-DPMNE party intends 
to continue with the protests that have already injured 47 police officers. But 
the real goal of the opposition is early parliamentary elections, as it sees 
the popularity of the ruling party dwindling. Opinion polls suggest that if 
elections were held this month, the ruling Social Democratic Party (SDSM) would 
receive around 16 percent of the vote. The opposition will gain 22 percent 
(Vecer.mk <https://vecer.mk/makedonija/1082631/> , July 7). However, over 41 
percent of surveyed Macedonian citizens are undecided and do not know which 
party they will vote for or refuse to say, suggesting confusion and frustration 
among the public.

The possibility of another delay in EU membership for North Macedonia and 
Albania (the two are coupled for EU membership) has led to fury in the region. 
These Balkan countries have been waiting for 17 and 8 years, respectively. 
After Greece lifted its objections, French President Emmanuel Macron vetoed new 
accession talks in October 2019, and then Bulgaria imposed its veto the 
following year. Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama called on the Macedonian 
government to accept the French proposal as the only chance to start 
negotiations for both states immediately (Euronews.al 
<https://euronews.al/en/albania/2022/06/30/pm-rama-calls-on-north-macedonia-to-accept-french-proposal/>
 , June 30).

Failure to accept the proposed agreement, as deficient as it is, could lead to 
inter-ethnic tensions in North Macedonia, where the Albanian population is 
becoming restless from the lack of progress in EU accession. The Albanians make 
up nearly 25 percent of the population, and they do not relate to the national 
identity and language sentiments of the Macedonians. A prolonged stalemate of 
EU integration and a new political crisis if the government falls could 
increase secessionist aspirations among the Albanian minority and threaten the 
country with partition.

Inter-ethnic scuffles have already taken place in Skopje on July 7. The police 
intervened to stop brawls between protesting ethnic Macedonians and a group of 
Albanians that involved throwing rocks and other hard objects at the entrance 
of Skopje’s Old Bazaar (Balkan Insight 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2022/07/07/north-macedonia-arrests-armed-man-at-ethnic-scuffle-in-capital/>
 , July 7). Law enforcement also arrested an armed man at the scene. The 
incident sparked mutual accusations between Macedonian ruling and opposition 
political parties but also among the Albanian parties associated with each of 
them—the Democratic Union for Integration (DUI), a part of the ruling 
coalition, and the Alliance of the Albanians, an ally of VMRO-DPMNE.

Fervent political polarization and political parties established along ethnic 
lines are two major characteristics of Macedonian politics. Although each of 
the two dominant Macedonian parties has its Albanian allies (and they sometimes 
switch sides), the ethnic segregation in politics indicates a larger problem 
with segregation in the society.

Further postponement of EU accession will open more opportunities for increased 
Russian and Chinese influence in the Balkans. The Kremlin has used local 
disputes and disagreements to sow discord by exploiting ethnic divisions and 
rivalries, inciting local leaders with special relationships and lucrative 
deals; and above all, it has used strategic corruption to influence local 
policy decisions. Analysts see the main organizer of the protests, the 
VMRO-DPMNE party, as a pro-Russian and pro-Serbian party that has adopted an 
anti-European position with the only goal to come back to power (Nova.bg, July 
5).

Although Russia is in a much weaker position at present, when it is faced with 
fierce Ukrainian resistance and subjected to international isolation, Moscow 
could still incite and use a potential new conflict in the Balkans as a second 
front to distract Western attention from the war in Ukraine.

 

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/00c401d89373%243283a500%24978aef00%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to