site.btaConsultative Meeting Reviews Bulgaria's Relations with North Macedonia
September 30 (BTA) - A consultative meeting called by
President Rumen Radev here on Monday reviewed Bulgaria's
relations with North Macedonia in light of the results achieved
by the Joint Multidisciplinary Commission of Experts on
Historical and Educational Issues between the two countries and
the expected invitation for North Macedonia to start
negotiations on joining the European Union. Addressing the media
after the meeting, President Radev said the participants
agreed in principle on the need of urgent steps to come up with
a national position with clear requirements and criteria that
will protect Bulgaria's national interest. Those requirements
and criteria should be enshrined in the negotiating framework
and become a mandatory condition for North Macedonia's
accession, said Radev.
The meeting was attended by Prime Minister Boyko Borissov,
Foreign Minister Ekaterina Zaharieva, Defence Minister Krassimir
Karakachanov, parliamentarians and the Bulgarian co-chair of
the Joint Multidisciplinary Commission, Prof. Angel Dimitrov.
President Radev also told the media that Bulgaria has always
supported North Macedonia's European and Euro-Atlantic
perspective in a principled and consistent manner, recalling
that Sofia was the first to recognize Skopje's independence and
that a Treaty of Friendship, Goodneighbourliness and
Cooperation was signed. The Treaty was expected to solve the
problems which have built up in the course of decades and to
give an impetus and a fresh perspective to the development of
bilateral relations, but the lack of specific conditions,
benchmarks and time frames in that Treaty meant that its
implementation lagged dramatically behind the process of North
Macedonia's EU integration. Despite the huge efforts made by
the Bulgarian side, the joint commission on historical and
educational matters has not achieved any particular results.
Things there have been very alarming recently, and North
Macedonia's conduct also causes insecurity and mistrust, said
Radev.
Special attention should be paid to school curricula and
syllabi, textbook texts, the inscriptions in museums and on
memorial plaques, and the positions of the public media, the
President said. He stressed the importance of laying down red
lines which are to guarantee that North Macedonia's EU
integration will not take place with the Bulgarian history,
language and identity used as a bargaining chip. Clear-cut
conditions should be set in advance and failure to meet them
should stop the transition to the next stages of the negotiating
process, said Radev.
He also raised the matter of air policing in North Macedonia:
"It was agreed in principle that the Bulgarian government will
use all levers within NATO and in dialogue with our partners so
as to partake responsibility and join in air policing duty on a
rotating basis."
Prime Minister Boyko Borissov told reporters after the meeting:
"We have never stated that we support North Macedonia's EU
membership unconditionally." He added: "Our position is clear:
it is important that they are accepted in the EU, but they must
understand that this depends on them and cannot happen at our
expense by rewriting history."
"After October 17, when the meeting on North Macedonia's EU
accession will be held in Brussels, we will have 71 instruments
to halt its progress towards the EU, namely, the opening and
closing of negotiating chapters," Borissov explained.
He said: "We used to say until recently that we were one people,
let's assume we are fraternal peoples. We wish this
fratricidal war waged by Skopje propaganda stopped because no
people is closer to us," said Borissov.
Regarding NATO membership, the Prime Minister noted that North
Macedonia can rely on Bulgaria and that Karakachanov is working
hard on the matter.
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ekaterina Zaharieva
told reporters that Bulgaria should not stop North Macedonia's
EU membership, but this is not unconditional and Bulgaria's
national interests must be protected in the first place.
Bulgaria should support North Macedonia's EU membership, but
with clear and concrete conditions, she said.
Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Krassimir
Karakachanov said the work of the Joint Commission is
unsatisfactory, the reason being Skopje's policy of buying time.
There cannot be unconditional support for North Macedonia. "A
clear position about [North] Macedonia's membership should be
drafted within days, on which the parliamentary parties should
reach a consensus," Karakachanov said, adding however, that the
decision will be made by the Bulgarian Government. "[North]
Macedonia's accession process should have clear conditions for
membership and there must be categorical results by October 17,"
he added.
Borissov, Karakachanov and Zaharieva said they would like to see
Albania and North Macedonia together on the path towards EU
membership.
Kristian Vigenin, who participated in the meeting in his
capacity as Parliament's Deputy Chair, said that Bulgaria has
always backed EU enlargement towards the countries of the
Western Balkans, but it cannot happen contrary to the Bulgarian
interest. Sofia should not admit to the EU a country which does
not honour its goodneighbourly commitments, he said. "We
agreed today that the government will issue a position within a
few days, then the BSP for Bulgaria will come up with its own
position, and we will seek a joint position," said Vigenin.
Polina Tsankova, deputy leader of the Volya - Bulgarian Patriots
Party, stated at the meeting that Bulgaria should not support
North Macedonia's bid for EU accession unless Skopje stops
manipulates the two countries' common history. The party's press
office quoted Volya leader Vesselin Mareshki as saying a few
months ago that Sofia sets one more condition: regulation of the
rights of the Bulgarian community in North Macedonia and its
recognition in the country's Constitution.
* * *
MIA news agency quoted North Macedonia's Prime Minister Zoran
Zaev as saying on Monday: "A swift solution to the open issues
with Bulgaria is possible." He added: "There is no need for
concern, we are receiving the alarm and messages from Bulgaria.
The committees are already working, we will hold other meetings
and highlight that the ultimate goal is for both sides to be
satisfied with the solution."
"We would like to see bold steps, steps based on facts and
truth, and we are urging for a solution. I believe Bulgaria
should also demonstrate will as we have done," Zaev told
reporters. DS,RY/MY,DD
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