04 јули 2025
• од Гоце Кически
An alleged behind-the-scenes lobbying drive by North Macedonia’s Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski to persuade members of the European Parliament to enshrine explicit recognition of a distinct Macedonian identity and language in the EU’s annual enlargement report has mushroomed into the scandal now known as “Skopjegate.” The affair is rattling Brussels, threatening to stall Skopje’s long-sought accession momentum and reigniting a decades-old dispute with neighbouring Bulgaria.
According to documents reviewed by the Bulgarian news agency BGNES, Austrian Green MEP and rapporteur Thomas Waitz held at least 36 undisclosed meetings with North-Macedonian officials. On 14 May—hours after a closed-door lunch in Brussels attended exclusively by Skopje’s delegation—five MEPs from three different political groups tabled six identical amendments asserting the EU’s recognition of a distinct Macedonian identity and language, wording that later surfaced verbatim in the draft report.
The leak infuriated Bulgarian MEPs, who complained that their own 40-plus counter-amendments were rejected almost wholesale. One of them, Ivaylo Valchev (ECR), filed a protest to EP President Roberta Metsola, calling the episode “external interference in the EU’s internal processes.”
On 24 June the Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee (AFET) nonetheless adopted the Waitz Report by 40–19, complete with new recital “L” and operative point 7, both explicitly “reaffirming” Macedonian identity and language. Bulgarian nationalist commentators immediately coined the hashtag #Skopjegate, likening it to last year’s Qatargate cash-for-favours scandal.
Faced with mounting criticism from Sofia and Athens, the three largest EP groups—EPP, S&D and Renew Europe—struck a late-night deal on 3 July to delete every reference to the contested identity clauses before next week’s Strasbourg plenary vote. Bulgarian MEP Andrey Kovatchev hailed the agreement as a victory for “historical truth.”
Back in Skopje, Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski blasted the U-turn as “done the Taliban way,” accusing Bulgaria of trying to erase his nation’s existence. Foreign Minister Timčo Mucunski called the deletions “shameful” and warned Brussels it risked alienating a pro-European public.
With the clock ticking toward next week’s plenary vote, diplomats warn the tempest over terminology could yet scuttle an entire year of technical progress—unless lawmakers find wording that squares historical sensitivities with Brussels’ rule-of-law focus. Either way, the political fallout from #Skopjegate now stretches far beyond the fine print of a parliamentary report.
Ненадминливи Понуди Дневно
4.8 (10276 рецензии)
Заштедете 152.00 ден
04 јули 2025
• од Гоце Кически
An alleged behind-the-scenes lobbying drive by North Macedonia’s Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski to persuade members of the European Parliament to enshrine explicit recognition of a distinct Macedonian identity and language in the EU’s annual enlargement report has mushroomed into the scandal now known as “Skopjegate.” The affair is rattling Brussels, threatening to stall Skopje’s long-sought accession momentum and reigniting a decades-old dispute with neighbouring Bulgaria.
According to documents reviewed by the Bulgarian news agency BGNES, Austrian Green MEP and rapporteur Thomas Waitz held at least 36 undisclosed meetings with North-Macedonian officials. On 14 May—hours after a closed-door lunch in Brussels attended exclusively by Skopje’s delegation—five MEPs from three different political groups tabled six identical amendments asserting the EU’s recognition of a distinct Macedonian identity and language, wording that later surfaced verbatim in the draft report.
The leak infuriated Bulgarian MEPs, who complained that their own 40-plus counter-amendments were rejected almost wholesale. One of them, Ivaylo Valchev (ECR), filed a protest to EP President Roberta Metsola, calling the episode “external interference in the EU’s internal processes.”
On 24 June the Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee (AFET) nonetheless adopted the Waitz Report by 40–19, complete with new recital “L” and operative point 7, both explicitly “reaffirming” Macedonian identity and language. Bulgarian nationalist commentators immediately coined the hashtag #Skopjegate, likening it to last year’s Qatargate cash-for-favours scandal.
Faced with mounting criticism from Sofia and Athens, the three largest EP groups—EPP, S&D and Renew Europe—struck a late-night deal on 3 July to delete every reference to the contested identity clauses before next week’s Strasbourg plenary vote. Bulgarian MEP Andrey Kovatchev hailed the agreement as a victory for “historical truth.”
Back in Skopje, Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski blasted the U-turn as “done the Taliban way,” accusing Bulgaria of trying to erase his nation’s existence. Foreign Minister Timčo Mucunski called the deletions “shameful” and warned Brussels it risked alienating a pro-European public.
With the clock ticking toward next week’s plenary vote, diplomats warn the tempest over terminology could yet scuttle an entire year of technical progress—unless lawmakers find wording that squares historical sensitivities with Brussels’ rule-of-law focus. Either way, the political fallout from #Skopjegate now stretches far beyond the fine print of a parliamentary report.
Ненадминливи Понуди Дневно
4.8 (10276 рецензии)
Заштедете 152.00 ден
04 јули 2025
• од Гоце Кически
An alleged behind-the-scenes lobbying drive by North Macedonia’s Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski to persuade members of the European Parliament to enshrine explicit recognition of a distinct Macedonian identity and language in the EU’s annual enlargement report has mushroomed into the scandal now known as “Skopjegate.” The affair is rattling Brussels, threatening to stall Skopje’s long-sought accession momentum and reigniting a decades-old dispute with neighbouring Bulgaria.
According to documents reviewed by the Bulgarian news agency BGNES, Austrian Green MEP and rapporteur Thomas Waitz held at least 36 undisclosed meetings with North-Macedonian officials. On 14 May—hours after a closed-door lunch in Brussels attended exclusively by Skopje’s delegation—five MEPs from three different political groups tabled six identical amendments asserting the EU’s recognition of a distinct Macedonian identity and language, wording that later surfaced verbatim in the draft report.
The leak infuriated Bulgarian MEPs, who complained that their own 40-plus counter-amendments were rejected almost wholesale. One of them, Ivaylo Valchev (ECR), filed a protest to EP President Roberta Metsola, calling the episode “external interference in the EU’s internal processes.”
On 24 June the Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee (AFET) nonetheless adopted the Waitz Report by 40–19, complete with new recital “L” and operative point 7, both explicitly “reaffirming” Macedonian identity and language. Bulgarian nationalist commentators immediately coined the hashtag #Skopjegate, likening it to last year’s Qatargate cash-for-favours scandal.
Faced with mounting criticism from Sofia and Athens, the three largest EP groups—EPP, S&D and Renew Europe—struck a late-night deal on 3 July to delete every reference to the contested identity clauses before next week’s Strasbourg plenary vote. Bulgarian MEP Andrey Kovatchev hailed the agreement as a victory for “historical truth.”
Back in Skopje, Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski blasted the U-turn as “done the Taliban way,” accusing Bulgaria of trying to erase his nation’s existence. Foreign Minister Timčo Mucunski called the deletions “shameful” and warned Brussels it risked alienating a pro-European public.
With the clock ticking toward next week’s plenary vote, diplomats warn the tempest over terminology could yet scuttle an entire year of technical progress—unless lawmakers find wording that squares historical sensitivities with Brussels’ rule-of-law focus. Either way, the political fallout from #Skopjegate now stretches far beyond the fine print of a parliamentary report.
Ненадминливи Понуди Дневно
4.8 (10276 рецензии)
Заштедете 152.00 ден