Macedonian Human Rights Movement of Canada 2004 Annual Report
The Macedonian Minority in Greece
Read
this page in Macedonian
March 27,
2004
Source: http://www.mhrmc.ca/reports/04/annual_greece.html
Table
of Contents
Introduction
Greek
Neo-Nazis Threaten Macedonian Minority Party (Rainbow/Vinozhito)
Greek
Neo-Fascists Attack 50 Year Old Man
Greek
Government Harassment of Rainbow/Vinozhito
Macedonian
Language and the European Bureau for Lesser Used Languages (EBLUL)
Macedonian
Political Refugees Denied Entry into Greece
Macedonian
Theatre Group Denied Entry into Greece
Greece Refuses
to Register Home of Macedonian Culture Despite European Court Ruling
Macedonian
Orthodox Church and Father Nikodim Tsarknias
Greece’s
Official Stance Regarding the Macedonian Minority & US State Department
Report on Greece
Conclusion
Introduction
Greece vigorously denies the existence of ethnic minorities on
its territory and attempts to suppress any voices that advocate
human rights. Simply raising the issue of the Macedonian minority in
Greece
causes Greek citizens and politicians alike to react in outrage.
The majority of Greek society supports its government's non-recognition
and discrimination of its large Macedonian minority. Following
are several
examples of Greece’s constant abuse of the Macedonian minority’s
rights.
Greek Neo-Nazis Threaten Macedonian Minority Party
(Rainbow/Vinozhito)
Rainbow/Vinozhito, the political party of the Macedonian minority in
Greece, was forced to cancel its congress twice because of threats received
from Greek Neo-Nazi organizations. Vinozhito is a legal political party
in Greece and did not receive any guarantees of security by Greek police,
nor did the Greek government intervene despite repeated appeals by Vinozhito
and the European Free Alliance in the European Parliament (of which
Vinozhito is a member). Please see www.mhrmc.ca/issues/congress.html for
the letters ignored by the Greek government and other issues surrounding
the congress. No Greek media or politicians denounced the threats by
the Neo-Nazi organizations. Moreover, several media outlets actually
praised the Neo-Nazi threats! For photographs of the demonstrations
and the newspaper articles please visit the link above. Following are
examples of Greece’s racist advertising against its Macedonian minority:
“Anti-Greek Provocation in Edessa: On November 30, 2003, there will
be a congress of filoskopjans in Edessa. One by one events are published
which create a web that threatens to destroy everything national in
our country. (Golden Dawn – November 13, 2003)
“Three weeks ago “Free World” uncovered the complete program of
the first congress of the filoskopjans of the “Rainbow” party in which
is stated the non-Greekness of Macedonia... fortunately, there were
residents in the area who became alarmed by our publication and took
action and denounced them and finally not one owner of any hall in
the town of Edessa would welcome the congress of the filoskopjans..
It seems crystal clear that the sly plans of some in our Macedonia
are coming from high places. And when they found themselves in a difficult
place and were unable to hold their congress in a private room they
used a public hall. Well since they pursue this course they will get
the intimidation they asked for and next Sunday we will find Greek
patriots who will stop them. (Free World – Weekly Newspaper, November
30, 2003)
“We will oppose it, all of those who are Greek must demonstrate
Sunday, 7th December at 11:00am. They must be in Edessa to put an
end to the propaganda of ‘Rainbow’. All together with one voice yell
loudly ‘Macedonia is one and it is Greek’” (Golden Dawn, Dec.4,
2003)
“Stop the Provocation by the Filoskopjans: The foreign interests
of "protectors" are to be found here from these marked internal agents
of every kind who are anti-Greek and filoskopjan and work to create
by force an issue of a skopjan minority in our Macedonia. We must
react now because tomorrow will be too late. We do not forget the
traitors or those who work for foreign interests. We cannot accept
the sellout of Macedonia to the Slavo-skopjans. We claim national
dignity. No compromise of any kind for our Macedonia. Rally Sunday,
December 7th, 2003 at 11:00 AM In Central Edessa. Everyone Must Be
There! (Golden Dawn, December 4, 2003)
In its press release of December 8, 2003, the Rainbow Party describes
the events surrounding the postponement of its Congress:
“ The guilty silence of competent authorities also raises reasonable
questions and so is the refusal of local party representatives to condemn
those phenomena of racist and Neonazist behavior in the city of Edessa.
Within the context of those incidents, the Congress Organizing Committee
decided to postpone the event, taking into consideration public safety,
after authorities failed to guarantee the security of the event, since
holding the event could potentially cause friction and spark off fights.
This is the situation in Greece, at the dawn of year 2004. Most
probably, Greece is only European country where Neonazism is a lawful
political parole, where racism, anti-Semitism, xenophobia and discrimination
against minority groups are frequent, making part of everyday reality,
both at the level of society and at the level of political parole
and implementation.
This is the situation in Greece, the country hosting the 2004 Olympic
Games, promoting rather hypocritically the motto “for one single culture
of all cultures”; a country member of the European Union that vigorously
refuses to ratify the Council of Europe Convention-Framework on Minority
Rights; a country that refers to the members of Turkish minority as
“Muslims” and does not recognize the existence of a Macedonian minority;
a country that refuses to sign the Charter for Regional or Minority
Languages, while only discussing the rights of Greeks in Istanbul
/ Konstandinoupoli and Southern Albania.”
Bartlomiej Swiderek of the European Free Alliance made the following
conclusion after a visit to Greece on December 11, 2003:
“ The Rainbow Party --Vinozhito, which has excellent links with minority
groups and human rights organisations in Greece copes with several problems
most of them linked with a lack of official recognition of the Macedonian
national minority in Greece. I have an impression that any activity
of the party, however peaceful, causes strong reactions from the far-right
groups and a part of Greek society very much linked to the myth of a "Hellenic
purity of the country" and scared of a "Slavo-Turko-European" plot directed
against Greece.
It really strikes me that the congress of a democratic and legal
party had to be cancelled for security reasons, while the far right
groups can organise their events without any problems. It is noteworthy,
that openly Nazi organisations like the mentioned "Golden Dawn" is
legal in Greece and can disrupt political activities of a minority
party.
I suggest that EFA monitors developments in Greece and gives all
necessary assistance to the Rainbow-Vinozhito party in their activities.”
Greece is notorious for being openly racist against its ethnic minorities.
It is a disgrace to the European Union and the international community
that the very country that claims to be the "birthplace of democracy" allows,
and actually supports, the racist policies of its many fascist and Neo-Nazi
organizations.
Greek Neo-Fascist Group Attacks 50-Year Old Man
The following are excerpts from a September 1, 2003 article in the
Greek newspaper Eleftherotypia, titled “The Minister Yelled and the
Police Woke Up”. English translation courtesy of http://www.maknews.com/
It was necessary for the Minister of Justice, Philippos Petsalnikos,
to intervene in order for the police to act and arrest two members of
Golden Dawn who were accused of beating a citizen.
The incident took place on the evening of Saturday, [August 30, 2003]
during a march by members of Golden Dawn in the city of Kastoria. According
to accusations from fifty year-old Christos Mihos, he was beaten by
members of Golden Dawn. A similar fate was suffered by a passerby who
tried to help. Both victims were taken to the hospital in Kastoria where
they received medical attention.
The victims wanted to sue the perpetrators and asked police to arrest
the attacker they had identified. However, the police "encouraged" the
victims to take the suit forward without naming their assailants! The
issue became known to Philippos Petsalnikos, who is the Minister of
Justice and the elected member of parliament from Kastoria.
The Minister stated to Eleftherotypia, "I reminded the police chief
that the incident took place on Greek territory and thus, the constitution
and the laws that foresee the taking of legal action against specific
persons must be implemented and especially their arrest given that they
had been identified and named by the victims."
After this nighttime intervention by the Minister, the police were
mobilized in the early morning hours whereupon they arrested the two
persons responsible for the attacks and charges were laid. Today they
will be taken before the courts in Kastoria. The Ministry of Public
Order was also informed of the negligence by the police.
All day yesterday 35 members of Golden Dawn remained outside the police
headquarters in Kastoria and for five hours blocked one of the busiest
streets in the city demanding the release of their two arrested members.
At noon, in a show of force, they travelled by bus to the town of Florina
and marched along the major streets shouting inflammatory slogans such
as "the Slavs should get out of Greece."
Greek Government Harassment of Rainbow/Vinozhito
The Rainbow Party has been the subject of attacks, both verbal and
physical, by the Greek public, media and even government officials.
The Rainbow Party hung a bilingual sign in Macedonian and Greek outside
their office in Lerin/Florina in 1995, which caused a huge uproar in
the city. Greek nationalists, led by the mayor of Florina, attacked
and destroyed the office. Four members of Rainbow were subsequently
put on trial for "causing and inciting mutual hatred among the citizens" under
Article 192 of the Greek Penal Code. Rainbow was essentially put on
trial for publicly using their mother tongue. Following worldwide condemnation
of the trial, the Rainbow members were finally acquitted in 1998. However,
the perpetrators of the crime were never charged and Rainbow has initiated
a European Court of Human Rights case against them.
Greek media and government officials constantly refer to Rainbow members
as “agents of Skopje”, “separatists” and “enemies of Greece.” Rainbow
does not receive coverage in the media when participating in elections
and instead get slandered at every opportunity.
The following are questions posed by Greek M.E.P. Mr. Stavros Xarhakos
to the European Parliament on March 19, 2003. The submission by Mr.
Xarhakos was titled, “EBLUL and the Systematic Defamation of a Member
of the E.U.”
“ It is well known that in Greece democratic freedoms and cultural
difference are fully protected in law. This is the context in which
the Muslim minority lives in Greek Thrace … its mosques built and restored
with money from the Greek state’.
‘What are the activities of EBLUL in countries where the cultural
identity of minorities is suppressed, as is the case, for example,
with the Greeks … in Turkey?’
‘Similar freedom is enjoyed by the other minority groups, however
few they may be, such as the small Slav-speaking community in the
region of Florina, which has set up a political party that enjoys
complete freedom of action (it has offices, newspapers, is free to
disseminate its ideas and does not fail to abuse Greece and the Greeks)’.
‘Does the Commission (which appears to provide financial support
for the activities of the EBLUL office) share the historically groundless
views of M. Brezigar concerning the alleged existence of a ‘Macedonian’
language?’
Macedonian Language and the European Bureau for Lesser
Used Languages (EBLUL)
In its report titled “The Sounds of Silence – The Macedonian Minority
in Greece in 2001”, the Greek Helsinki Monitor states:
“…the Greek government has persistently refused to allow the teaching
of the Macedonian language in schools, even in villages where the
majority of inhabitants speak Macedonian. The Greek government, via
its Spokesperson Minister for the Press and the Mass Media Dimitris
Reppas, refused an appeal by the European Parliament’s “Green and
European Free Alliance” group to Prime Minister Costas Simitis, in
May 2000, for the recognition of the Macedonian language and its introduction
in the education system.”
Despite Greece’s opposition, the European Bureau for Lesser Used Languages
opened an office in Salonica in 2002, with Nase Parisis, an ethnic Macedonian
human rights activist, as its first president. It is ironic that EBLUL,
which promotes minority languages, has opened an office in a country
that claims that it has no minorities.
Macedonian Political Refugees Denied
Entry into Greece
On June 8, 2003, Greek Deputy Foreign Minister, Andreas Loverdos, made
an historic announcement pledging the free return of Macedonian political
refugees, evacuated from Greece as children during the Greek Civil War
of 1946-1949. The child refugees (Detsa Begaltsi) have consistently
been denied entry into Greece simply because they assert their Macedonian
ethnic identity. They were excluded from the 1982 law that allowed the
free return of political refugees that were “Greek by genus”. Answering
a question on the free visit of "non-ethnic Greek" political refugees,
Mr. Loverdos, stated that "since we have overcome all these problems
of the past and of the civil war... we want to overcome this vestige
too sooner rather than later...during this summer."
The events that followed Loverdos’ “historic” announcement were indicative
of a country that views itself as a Western democracy but consistently
proves itself to be the very antithesis of one. Following a nationalistic
uproar by a large segment of Greek society, who were worried that the
political refugees would “incite” the local Macedonian population into
a heightened sense of nationalism, the Greek government reversed its
decision and chose to impede the reunion in any way possible. It then
proceeded to announce, on July 3, 2003 that the political refugees will
be allowed to enter the country from August 10 to October 30, and would
only be allowed to stay for 20 days. The date of the Detsa Begaltsi's
Third World Reunion was well-publicized and was originally going to
take place from July 15-20, 2003. The Greek government's announcement
forced the organizers to reschedule the event to August 10-15, which
caused a large number of political refugees, particularly from Canada,
the United States, and Australia, to miss the event as they originally
planned to enter Greece before July 10.
It is remarkable that Greece, a European Union country, would reverse
a humanitarian decision in favour of state-sponsored racism that has
been widely endorsed in Greece.
Out of the people who tried to enter Greece for the reunion, it is
estimated that approximately two hundred Macedonians were denied entry
into Greece during the summer of 2003.
On July 20, 2003, Australian citizen Janko Kalinchev, born in the village
of Ovcharani (Meliti in Greek), and Canadian citizen Georgi Kizovski,
born in Gabresh (Gavros), attempted to enter Greece from the Republic
of Macedonia in order to visit their birthplaces. However, Greek border
officials denied them entry and refused to give them an explanation,
instead saying that they were denied entry for "other reasons".
According to Mr. Kizovski, "The Greek government keeps a blacklist
of people who are active in Macedonian organizations abroad and who
openly declare themselves as Macedonian. We were obviously returned
at the border because of our membership in the Association of Refugee
Children from the Aegean Part of Macedonia (Detsa Begaltsi) in Australia
and Canada." Greek officials have publicly stated that 80 Macedonian
activists living abroad are on a “blacklist”. In its press release
of August 10, 2003, the Greek Helsinki Monitor stated,
“Preventing their entrance on grounds of their activism directly
contravenes the special UN, OSCE, Council of Europe and EU provisions
for the state's responsibility to respect and even defend NGOs and
human rights activists.”
In July, 2002, a border document proving the existence of this blacklist,
which had been denied by the Greek government, was given to Steve Pliakes,
a well-known Canadian-Macedonian activist. Furthermore, the Governor
of the Prefecture of Florina, Mr. G. Stratakis, publicly acknowledged
the existence of this blacklist on July 23, 2003. The ultra-nationalistic
Greek newspaper, Stohos, even published the names of approximately half
of the Macedonians on this list in a recent issue. In its press release
of August 10, 2003 the Rainbow Party describes the reunion:
Unfortunately, this “humanitarian measure” turned into a farce. Once
again, the large majority of Macedonian political refugees were denied
entry into Greece even for a simple visit. On 10 August 2003 a delegation
from Rainbow was present at the Niki – Negochani border station in Florina
– Lerin. No political refugee was permitted to enter Greece (of more
than 20 individuals appearing between 11.00 and 13.00) whose travel
document recorded the bearer’s place of birth with its former (Macedonian)
name. Entry into Greece was forbidden to those Macedonian political
refugees with Republic of Macedonia passports, as well as to those with
passports from other countries, such as Australia, Czech Republic, and
Hungary. The border officials did not note on the forms the actual reason
why entry was denied (this, they explained to us orally), but instead
cited other reasons.
The absurdity of the matter of Macedonian political refugees holding
travel documents (passports) from the Republic of Macedonia is that
Greece does not recognize these passports because they record the
name of country as the “Republic of Macedonia.” Yet it asks the Macedonian
refugees holding these passports to change the name of their birthplace
in a passport that Greece doesn’t recognize. For this reason, following
the interim agreement between the two countries in 1995, the travel
document that Greece recognizes is not the passport, but rather a
sheet of white A4 paper bearing the visa. Perhaps our country ought
to change its stand and finally accept Republic of Macedonia as the
name of our neighboring country?
As for the Macedonian refugees from other European countries that
have signed accession agreements with the EU (Czech Republic, Slovakia,
Hungary, Poland, Slovenia), how will Greece explain such a refusal
of entry to these governments? How will it behave in April 2004 when
these countries become full EU member-states? How will it then explain
the refusal of entry to equal and law-abiding European citizens, who
have the right to enter Greece simply by presenting their personal
identity cards? Will Greece then blacklist these citizens as persona
non grata?
Perhaps the Greek government and the Greek Foreign Ministry can
explain – if the reason for barring entry into our country is, indeed,
the use of place names, which are aspects of the linguistic and cultural
heritage of both Greece and Europe – why the use of these names should
to be a reason to bar entry? Can it provide us with an example of
another European country that has barred entry to its former citizens
for the same reason?
Vana Niczowski and her husband Chris, both Canadian citizens of Macedonian
ethnicity, who had fled to Poland following the Greek Civil War, attempted
to enter Greece on July 21, 2003. Mrs. Niczowski was born in Statitsa
(Melas in Greek), Kostur (Kastoria) region and her birthplace was spelled
“Kosturia” on her passport. The Greek border official insisted that
this was “not the Greek name of the city and sounded too Slavic” and
therefore, denied her entry.
Greece has consistently refused entry to people who use the original
Macedonian village/city name on their passports, instead of the new
Greek toponyms applied after 1926. In its press release of August 1,
2003, the Rainbow Party, political party of the Macedonian minority
in Greece, stated:
“Greece should establish a record of toponyms (both old and new),
a practice and a policy carried out in many democratic countries,
especially since there is such a provision in international texts
related to the protection of the heritage of linguistic, religious
or ethnic minorities.”
The Greek government has used this as an excuse to deny entry to dozens
of Macedonian political refugees. The Rainbow Party goes on to say:
" Let every democratic citizen of Greece consider how he or she would
judge similar behavior from another country acting against its Greek
minority. Let us assume, for example, that the Albanian government forbids
entry to one of its former citizens, a member of the Greek minority,
who abandoned Albania in the course of the Greek-Italian war in 1940,
was stripped of his Albanian citizenship and had his property confiscated
by the state. Assume that person today resides in Canada or Australia
and in his Canadian or Australian passport, his place of birth is not
mentioned as 'Drach' (the Albanian name of a city in Southern Albania),
but "Dirahio" (the name of the same city in Greek).
How would we judge such an action of the Albanian government? How
would we judge the placement of other such citizens in a list of "personae
non grata" by the Albanian Foreign Office, because in Melbourne or
Toronto they participate in Greek and not Albanian cultural associations?
What would we say if the Albanian government stripped them of their
citizenship and forbade them as long as they lived to visit their
families and their places of origin in Southern Albania? Would we
not correctly characterize such behavior as racist and inhuman?”
Despite repeated requests by the MHRMC over the past 15 years, the
Canadian government has refused to confront Greece over its systematic
persecution of Canadian citizens. However, Canada has made similar requests
of other countries, including the United States, when border incidents
involving Canadian citizens occur. (See www.mhrmc.ca/press/02/letter.html for
the MHRMC's letter to Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham, imploring
Canada to investigate the several cases of Canadian-Macedonians being
denied entry into Greece in 2002. See www.mhrmc.ca/press/03/graham.pdf for
Mr. Graham’s outright dismissal of the MHRMC request). The Canadian
government applies a double standard when choosing when to defend its
citizens rights and which countries it confronts.
The following are comments made by Greek parliamentarian Evgenios Haitidis
regarding the Macedonian political refugees. They are indicative of
Greek society’s attitude towards the Macedonian minority:
“ They are contemptible separatists, who appear to act undisturbed
not only outside Greece but inside Greece as well, under the tolerance
or even the assistance of government members”,
“Their primary goal is the recognition of a “Macedonian Ethnic Minority
in Greece”, while their ultimate goal is self-rule namely, the detachment
of Greek territory”.
Mr. Haitidis claims that the Macedonian political refugees “have
been found guilty in regular courts of law of being enemy collaborators
and criminals and are being characterized by strong anti-Greek activity
abroad”.
On January 7, 2004, the Greek Deputy Foreign Minister, once again,
announced that the issue of the blacklist and Macedonian political refugees
would finally be solved. He pledged that the blacklist would be abolished
and that no conditions would be placed on ethnic Macedonians who wanted
to enter Greece.
George Saragil, an ethnic Macedonian from Lerin/Florina, Greece, immigrated
to Canada in 1969 and became a Canadian citizen. He had travelled to
Greece several times in the 1980’s and 1990’s but was denied entry in
July 2000 and was told that he was on Greece’s blacklist. They instructed
him to consult the Greek Consulate in Toronto for more information.
Following Mr. Loverdos’ second announcement, Mr. Saragil sent a letter
(www.mhrmc.ca/press/04/saragil.html)
to the Greek consulate in Toronto asking him to confirm the announcement
and whether he would be allowed to enter Greece. He has yet to receive
a response.
Greece must be pressured to stop making empty promises and to finally
solve the issue of the Macedonian political refugees and blacklist.
The European Union must demand that one of its member nations stop discriminating
against citizens of other countries based solely on their Macedonian
ethnicity.
Macedonian Theatre Group Denied Entry into Greece
The following is a quote by Tihomir Stojanovski, Art Director of the
Macedonian theatre group “Skrb I Uteha” at the Third Macedonian World
Human Rights Conference on September 20, 2003.
“We were supposed to visit, Lerin, Republic of Greece i.e. Aegean
Macedonia in September 2001. The Hellenic Liaison Office in Skopje
told the Agency that was supposed to take us to Greece and to get
visas for us that: “this is politics and plays in the Macedonians
language are not allowed in that part of Greece?!” We sent them many
letters including the invitation of the Home of Macedonian Culture
in Lerin. We talked over the phone. They met us and they told us that
they would inform us about the visas in a written form. A long time
passed, and we have not received any information. I talked twice over
the phone with the Greek Consul Mr. Mihalopulos and he told me that
Athens is not issuing visas to us because of security reasons. They
are not issuing any written document that they are not giving us the
visas. Unofficially, plays in Macedonian are not allowed in this part
of Greece?! I wrote open letters to Mr. J. Papandreou, Minister of
Foreign Affairs and to the Minister of Culture of the Hellenic Republic.
The Greek Helsinki Committee published the letters in its annual report
on human rights for 2001: 30 December 2001, “Sounds of Silence”- The
Macedonian Minority in Greece in 2001 (www.greekhelsinki.gr/bhr/english/special_issues/cerd.html).
Greece Refuses to Register Home of Macedonian Culture
Despite European Court Ruling
The European Court of Human Rights convicted Greece for a violation
of freedom of association in the case of Sideropoulos and others vs.
Greece in 1998 for failing to register the Home of Macedonian Culture.
Despite repeated attempts since then, the Home of Macedonian Culture
(HMC) has encountered numerous obstacles in trying to register the association.
A complete summary of the events surrounding Greece’s refusal to register
the Home can be found at the Greek Helsinki Monitor’s special webpage
on the subject: www.greekhelsinki.gr/bhr/english/special_issues/home_of_macedonian_civilization.html
The most recent example occurred in June 2003 when the HMC filed an
application with the Single-Member Court of First Instance in Florina.
After a lengthy delay, the court issued its decision on December 19,
2003, rejecting the application by the Home of Macedonian Culture and
making the following outrageous claims:
‘the formulation of the associations’ articles is unclear and can
cause confusion regarding its real goal…The use of the term ‘Macedonian
culture’ intensifies this confusion by connecting this with a non-existent
language, described as ‘makedonski’…The recognition of such an organization
contains a direct danger to public order and provides an opportunity
for exploitation by foreign agents, who have tried from time to time,
unsuccessfully, to fabricate a historically non-existent ‘Macedonian
nation’…For all the reasons mentioned above, we reject the application.’
Greece continues to make a mockery of the European Court of Human Rights
and obviously has no intention of registering the Home of Macedonian
Culture despite the European Court’s decision of 1998. The European
Union must enforce its decision and force Greece to immediately register
the Home of Macedonian Culture.
Another Macedonian organization, Rousallii, was denied registration
by the Greek courts in 2000.
Macedonian Orthodox Church and Father Nikodim
Tsarknias
Father Nikodim Tsarknias has been harassed, beaten, fined, jailed and
expelled from the Greek Orthodox Church for advocating human rights
for the Macedonian minority in Greece. He has also been the subject
of several court cases, in which he has been found guilty in absentia,
for promoting Macedonian human rights. He has an upcoming civil court
case on May 11, 2004 for promoting the “non-existent Macedonian nation”
because he is building a Macedonian Orthodox Church in the city of Sobotsko
(Aridea in Greek) and is also holding religious service in the Macedonian
language there every Sunday.
In its report, “Sounds of Silence – The Macedonian Minority in Greece
in 2001”, the Greek Helsinki Monitor describes the attitude of the Greek
Orthodox Church towards Macedonians:
“At the same time, in the rare occasions that, despite the prevailing
hostility towards such actions, parents want to christen their children
giving them Macedonian names, the (civil servants) Orthodox priests
refuse to do so and often end up arbitrarily giving Greek equivalent
names. In 2001, GHM and MRG-G were informed of two such recent cases.
On 23 April 1998, in the Meliti (Florina, Western Macedonia) St. George
church, the priest imposed the name of Domna to the infant girl of
Evangelos and Elizabeth Anastasiadis who wanted to name her after
her grandmother Donka.”
Greece’s Official Stance Regarding the Macedonian
Minority & US State Department Report on Greece
On April 7, 2003, the MHRMC issued a press release (www.mhrmc.ca/press/03/statedept.html)
following the US State Department’s “Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices – 2002: Greece” protesting its continued misrepresentation
of the Macedonian minority. The Greek Helsinki Monitor also protested
with the US State Department, boycotted the US Embassy in Greece, and
filed complaints with the Helsinki Commission of the US Congress. Following
these protests, the US State Department made some changes in its 2003
report (issued on February 25, 2004) but it is still grossly inadequate
and mirrors the official Greek position that the Macedonian minority
is illegitimate. Following are excerpts from our 2003 press release:
The Macedonian Human Rights Movement of Canada is appalled by the US
State Department’s continued misrepresentation of the Macedonian minority
in Greece in its “Country Reports on Human Rights Practices – 2002:
Greece”. Despite numerous appeals by the MHRMC and other international
NGOs, (see the Greek Helsinki Monitor’s press release of March 18, 2002: www.greekhelsinki.gr/bhr/english/organizations/ghm/ghm_18_03_02.rtf)
the US State Department continues to make erroneous statements regarding
this minority in what can only be seen as an attempt to appease Greek
sensitivities to the Macedonian issue. For example, when referring to
the Macedonian minority, the US State Department places the term Macedonian
in quotation marks. This gives the impression that the US State Department
agrees with the official Greek position that this minority is illegitimate.
The Macedonian minority and language are internationally recognized
as such but the US State Department questions its legitimacy throughout
this report by referring to it as “Slavo-Macedonian”, “Slavic dialect”
and by making statements such as:
“Northwestern Greece is home to an indeterminate number of citizens
who speak a Slavic dialect at home, particularly in Florina province.
Estimates ranged widely, from under 10,000 to 50,000. A small number
identified themselves as belonging to a distinct ethnic group and
asserted their right to “Macedonian” minority status.”
Most estimates place the Macedonian minority at well over the numbers
stated above. Macedonians live throughout the region of Aegean Macedonia,
not just in the Lerin/Florina district. Furthermore, a large number
identify as ethnic Macedonians, not an insignificant segment of the
population as this report indicates.
Several local and international NGOs, including local Macedonian activists
in Greece, have repeatedly contacted the US State Department in order
to provide information about the human rights abuses suffered by the
Macedonian minority. The US State Department selectively chooses which
information to use which gives credit to the argument that its main
agenda is to pursue its own interests, not the achievement of human
rights for oppressed minorities. The Greek Helsinki Monitor ended its
2002 press release by stating:
“[The US State Department’s] attitude towards Macedonians in Greece,
as reflected in the annual reports, cannot therefore be considered
an oversight, or a result of lack of information; on the contrary
it is a sustained and deliberate policy of complacency towards Greek
authorities on the most sensitive human rights issue in Greece. Such
complacency is not shown towards Bulgarian authorities that have a
similar sensitivity for Macedonians, whose problems are mentioned
in the relevant chapter.”
The MHRMC calls on the US State Department to correct its past errors
and issue an immediate press release to rectify its erroneous statements
about the Macedonian minority in Greece.
Conclusion
The Macedonian Human Rights Movement of Canada calls on the international
community to apply pressure on Greece to end its racial profiling of
individuals of Macedonian ethnic background, to immediately solve the
issue of the Macedonian political refugees, to repeal the racist 1982
law that only permits ethnic Greek political refugees to return to Greece,
and to immediately recognize its large Macedonian minority and grant
it the human rights that it is guaranteed by all international human
rights conventions. The MHRMC specifically asks that the European Union
end its hypocrisy in demanding that new member states respect human
rights standards while ignoring human rights violations within the EU.
Written by:
Bill Nicholov
Vice-President, Macedonian Human Rights Movement of Canada
Address: P.O. Box 44532, 2376 Eglinton Ave. East, Toronto, Canada M1K 5K3
Tel: 416-493-9555 Fax: 416-412-3385
Email: mail@mhrmc.ca Website: http://www.mhrmc.ca
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