The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Protesters ransack offices of Macedonia’s presidency

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SKOPJE: Protesters ransacked the offices of Macedonia’s presidency late Wednesday and set fire to the furniture, as thousands took to the capital’s streets in a deepening political crisis.

Sporadic clashes broke out in Skopje as demonstrat­ors pelted buildings with eggs and stones, with one group smashing all the windows at President Gjorge Ivanov’s public offices before setting the furniture alight.

Twelve people were arrested and a journalist was injured in the clashes, police spokesman Toni Angelovski told AFP.

The demonstrat­ors are demanding that Ivanov resign after his shock decision Tuesday to block legal proceeding­s against top politician­s embroiled in a wire-tapping scandal.

The United States and European Union have both voiced serious concern over Ivanov’s move, which is threatenin­g Macedonia’s aspiration­s to join the EU.

The Balkan country is also on the frontline of Europe’s migrant crisis, and has been under the spotlight over its use of force to prevent desperate migrants from crossing the shuttered border with Greece.

Ivanov’s move has deepened a crisis that began last year when the opposition SDSM party accused then premier Nikola Gruevski of wiretappin­g some 20,000 people, including politician­s and journalist­s, and said the recordings revealed highlevel corruption.

The government denied the accusation­s and in return filed charges against SDSM leader Zoran Zaev, accusing him of ‘spying’ and attempting to ‘destabilis­e’ the country of two million people.

Wednesday’s clashes came as people poured onto the streets of Skopje for a second night running, with smashed glass from the windows of Ivanov’s offices littering the ground and riot police turning out in force.

In front of the parliament, SDSM supporters tried to break through a police cordon towards rival supporters of the ruling VMRO-DPMNE party, an AFP journalist said.

EU Enlargemen­t Commission­er Johannes Hahn urged calm, tweeting that he was calling “upon all political parties and responsibl­e citizens to refrain from acts of violence”.

In a televised address to the nation Tuesday, Ivanov said he was halting proceeding­s against politician­s embroiled in the scandal “in order to put an end to this political crisis” ahead of elections planned for June.

Gruevski – a political ally of the president – was among those targeted in the probes, along with Zaev, former interior minister Gordana Jankulovsk­a and exintellig­ence chief Sasho Mijalkov.

Gruevski stepped down as premier in January, paving the way for parliament­ary elections – but the opposition has announced plans to boycott the polls, saying it fears electoral fraud.

Although he may himself benefit from the dropping of the probe, Zaev denounced what he called a ‘coup d’etat’ by the president.

Macedonia has been a candidate for EU membership since 2005 but accession talks have yet to open and the prolonged crisis will do nothing to improve its chances. — AFP

The EU voiced alarm over the dropping of the wiretap inquiry, saying it raised “serious concerns”.

“We call on all sides to avoid interventi­ons that risk underminin­g years of efforts within the country and with the support of the internatio­nal community to strengthen the rule of law,” a spokespers­on for the bloc’s foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said.

The US ambassador to Skopje, Jess Baily, warned in a tweet that “a blanket pardon without due process protects corrupt politician­s and their associates”. — AFP

 ??  ?? Protesters against a decision by Macedonia’s President to pardon 56 government and opposition figures clash with police in Skopje, Macedonia. — Reuters photo
Protesters against a decision by Macedonia’s President to pardon 56 government and opposition figures clash with police in Skopje, Macedonia. — Reuters photo

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