http://www.b92.net/eng/news/globe-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=08&dd=18&nav_category=123&nav_id=43097

Macedonia: Dispute over federalization
18 August 2007 | 10:12 | Source: BIRN
*SKOPJE -- A leader of a radical Albanian nationalist movement has 
distanced himself from calls for the federalization of Macedonia.

* Nevzat Halili, President of National Albanian Movement of Ilirida, has 
dissociated himself from a statement purportedly released by his 
organization, which called for the proclamation of a “Republic of 
Ilirida” in the ethnic Albanian-inhabited north-western region of 
Macedonia.

Halili’s comments followed Thursday’s release of a statement in 
Ilirida’s name which demanded the formation of two separate 
ethnically-based entities for Macedonia’s majority Slav community and 
its ethnic Albanians.

It called on ethnic Albanian members of parliament to withdraw from 
Macedonia’s public institutions.

Commenting on the latest demand for the federalization of Macedonia, 
political analyst Dane Taleski told Balkan Insight that those who 
promote radical ideas among ethnic Albanians in Macedonia are now 
increasingly marginalized.

Taleski expects nationalist ideas to gain some momentum among 
Macedonia’s Albanians as talks over the long-term status of neighboring 
Kosovo, with its independence-seeking ethnic Albanian majority, approach 
some kind of resolution.

"But I believe that these are the last remnants of Albanian extremism 
that reached its peak during the 1990s", Taleski said, “and they do not 
have the support of key ethnic Albanian politicians, either in Macedonia 
or in Kosovo.

“They know that these ideas are counterproductive for the Kosovo's 
efforts to promote itself as a factor of stability".

Police spokesman Ivo Kotevski refused to comment for Balkan Insight on 
claims in the Ilirida statement that its "armed members" control a part 
of Macedonia’s territory.

About a quarter of Macedonia's two million inhabitants are ethnic 
Albanians, and the Albanian community has 29 deputies in the 120-seat 
parliament.

Ethnic Albanians rebelled in early 2001, but the conflict ended with the 
Ohrid peace deal signed in August of that year.

Subsequent changes made to the Macedonian constitution considerable 
increased minority rights, granted local self-government to ethnic 
Albanians, and made Albanian the second official language in a range of 
public institutions.

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