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List: NYC-L[NYC-L] [AMCC-News] Macedonia strikes power deal seen crucial for peaceMentor Cana mentor at alb-net.comThu Jul 15 12:52:34 EDT 2004
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Macedonia strikes power deal seen crucial for peace
15 Jul 2004 10:13:31 GMT
By Kole Casule
SKOPJE, July 15 (Reuters) - Macedonia's coalition government has struck a
long-delayed deal handing more powers to the local level, a crucial part of
the 2001 peace accord granting greater rights to the ethnic Albanian
minority.
The agreement late on Wednesday, unpopular among many in the Macedonian
majority, should give the country's 500,000 Albanians more control over
municipalities where they form a majority.
It represents a final step in implementing the NATO-brokered deal that
ended seven months of clashes between government security forces and ethnic
Albanian rebels three years ago.
The issue has sparked fierce debate in Macedonia, a small Balkan state of
just two million people. Protestors backed by the rightwing opposition
VMRO-DPMNE party have accused the government of dividing Macedonia along
ethnic lines.
Diplomats say the deal, which still has to be adopted by parliament, is
vital for Macedonia's ambition to join the European Union, having formally
applied for membership in March.
"If we want to build Macedonia as a European country we must go forward,"
said Defence Minister Vlado Buckovski.
"The obstacle we must pass is the peace deal ... This is probably the only
medicine for the frustrations of Macedonians and Albanians," he told
reporters.
Talks within the Social Democrat-led coalition, which includes a party that
emerged from the guerrilla force, had been stalled for six weeks as
politicians argued over how best to redraw municipal boundaries and shift
power in local councils.
The three government parties have a majority in parliament.
Under the deal, the Macedonian capital Skopje will become bilingual,
meaning street signs and official documents will be printed in both
Albanian and Macedonian.
Albanian will become the second official language in municipalities with an
Albanian population of at least 20 percent.
Most ethnic Albanians in Macedonia live in the west of the country in towns
bordering Albania and Kosovo, the majority Albanian province administered
by the United Nations since NATO's 1999 bombing campaign to halt Serb
repression.
The decentralisation package also shifts power over sectors including
schools, health and local economic development from national to local
government. Municipal elections are now expected to be held on October 17.
Opposition leader Nikola Gruevski said the accord would create "artificial
societies with classic ethnic enclaves, completely destroying the system of
multi-ethnic life".
The guerrillas agreed in 2001 to lay down arms in return for greater rights
for the large minority.
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