November 23, 2024
epa06692019 Macedonian Foreign Minister Nikola Dimitrov (R), and Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias (L) arrive for a meeting at the UN in Vienna, Austria, 25 April 2018. The foreign ministers of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) and Greece are invited by the United Nations for talks to resolve a long-standing name dispute between the two countries. EPA-EFE/ALEX HALADA

Macedonia Says ‘Framework’ for ‘Name’ Solution is Reached

Macedonia and Greece have agreed a ‘framework’ for a compromise solution to their bilateral name dispute – but it needs more work, Macedonia’s Foreign Minister said on a visit to Brussels.

Macedonian Foreign Minister, Nikola Dimitrov, said after meeting his Greek counterpart, Nikos Kotzias, on Sunday in Brussels, that the two sides had reached a framework for a solution to the dispute over Macedonia’s name – but it needed more work.

“We have a framework that needs more work and at the moment legal teams from both ministries are working on it,” Dimitrov told Macedonia’s state MIA news agency on Monday.

Not disclosing any specifics of the framework, Dimitrov said that in light of a possible breakthrough, an “important” meeting was planned between the two prime ministers, Macedonia’s Zoran Zaev and Greece’s Alexis Tsipras, for the middle of this week, “where I hope that some important things will be decided, from the options that are at the table”.

On Monday and Tuesday in Brussels, Dimitrov and Kotzias attend the EU Foreign Affairs Council where, at the margins, they were expected to resume their bilateral talks.

The last round of UN-sponsored talks on Thursday and Friday in New York, held in the presence of the UN mediator, Matthew Nimetz, ended without a breakthrough.

In the absence of much official information, media reports have speculated that the adjectives New, Upper, Northern or Vardarska – stemming from Macedonia’s biggest river, the Vardar – before the word Macedonia, had been discussed.

The two sides have also yet to agree on the span of use of any possible compromise name.

But in her remarks on Monday, at the start of the Foreign Affairs Council, the EU’s Foreign Affairs Commissioner, Federica Mogherini, said the progress made at the Athens-Skopje talks was very encouraging.

“We are all very encouraged by the progress made especially on the negotiations between Skopje and Athens on the name issue. We will all work to support and accompany, hopefully, a positive outcome of these important negotiations,” Mogherini said.

On Monday morning, Mogherini had a working breakfast with Macedonia’s Dimitrov and with the foreign ministers of EU member states.

During the breakfast, EU Enlargement Commissioner Johannes Hahn tweeted his “Thanks to @NikosKotzias and @Dimitrov_Nikola for their constructive, hard work!” adding that “Everyone expressed wholehearted support to the negotiations”.

For more read the full of article at The Balkaninsight

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