Καταστροφική αλλά κυρίως ανησυχητική για τη Δημοκρατία χαρακτηρίζει τη Συμφωνία των Πρεσπών για το Σκοπιανό το έγκυρο περιοδικό TIME.
«Η συμφωνία για αλλαγή ονόματος της Μακεδονίας είναι ένας θρίαμβος για την Ευρωπαϊκή Ένωση, αλλά ανησυχητική για τη Δημοκρατία», είναι ο τίτλος του άρθρου του TIME για τη Συμφωνία των Πρεσπών.
Το αμερικανικό περιοδικό αποδομεί με επιχειρήματα τη Συμφωνία των Πρεσπών και προειδοποιεί παράλληλα για τους σοβαρούς κινδύνους που
δημιουργεί η επικύρωσή της.
Το γνωστό αμερικανικό περιοδικό (με κυκλοφορία 2.500.000 αντιτύπων διεθνώς) επισημαίνει ότι μετά τη διάλυση της Γιουγκοσλαβίας το 1991, ο
βόρειος γείτονας της Ελλάδας πήρε
το όνομα «Μακεδονία», αλλά η Αθήνα αρνήθηκε να το αναγνωρίσει, λέγοντας ότι
νομιμοποιεί τις εδαφικές διεκδικήσεις στη βόρεια ελληνική επαρχία της Μακεδονίας.
«Για την Ευρωπαϊκή Ένωση», συνεχίζει λίγο πιο κάτω η ανάλυση, «η Συμφωνία των Πρεσπών
είναι ταυτόχρονα μια γεωπολιτική νίκη και μια δικαίωση του οράματός της για το
πώς πρέπει να λειτουργεί η διεθνής πολιτική».
Ωστόσο, όπως επισημαίνει, υπάρχουν τρία προβλήματα με το αφήγημα
αυτό.
Το πρώτο, σύμφωνα με το TIME, είναι ότι η Ευρωπαϊκή Ένωση «διάλεξε να αγνοήσει προβληματικές πτυχές μιας διαδικασίας
επικύρωσης που αμφισβήτησε τους συνταγματικούς κανόνες και τις αρχές του
κράτους δικαίου τόσο στη Μακεδονία όσο
και στην Ελλάδα».
Όπως εξηγεί, για να περάσει η συμφωνία και στα δύο κοινοβούλια
«χρειάστηκε πολιτικό παζάρι που έφτασε στα όρια της νομιμότητας».
Χαρακτηριστικά αναφέρει ότι ο Ζόραν Ζάεφ για να περάσει τη συμφωνία από το δικό του κοινοβούλιο
χρησιμοποίησε απειλές για δικαστικές διώξεις, αλλά και έναν αμφιλεγόμενο νόμο
για πολιτική αμνηστία, ενώ ασκήθηκαν μεγάλες πιέσεις και από ξένες κυβερνήσεις.
Για τον Αλέξη Τσίπρα, σημειώνει ότι για να περάσει τη συμφωνία στηρίχθηκε σε
βουλευτές που ήταν αντίθετοι σε αυτή, αλλά «δελεάστηκαν με την υπόσχεση
κυβερνητικών θέσεων», ενώ αναφέρει και τις καταγγελίες εναντίον του Αλέξη Τσίπρα ότι «ανακατεύεται με το δικαστικό σώμα, τα Μέσα Ενημέρωσης
και το στρατό».
Το δεύτερο πρόβλημα που αναδεικνύει το έγκριτο αμερικανικό περιοδικό είναι ότι
«και οι δύο κυβερνήσεις περνάνε τη Συμφωνία των Πρεσπών ενάντια στη βούληση μεγάλου μέρους της χώρας τους».
Θυμίζει δε ότι όλες οι δημοσκοπήσεις στην Ελλάδα «δείχνουν ισχυρή λαϊκή πλειοψηφία ενάντια στη συμφωνία»,
ενώ υπογραμμίζει ότι «η Ευρωπαϊκή Ένωση μοιάζει ξανά να εμφανίζεται ως μια
γραφειοκρατία που προτιμά να αγνοεί τις λαϊκές αντιδράσεις και την κυριαρχία
των πιο αδύναμων κρατών».
Το τρίτο πρόβλημα είναι ότι «ακόμα και ο γεωπολιτικός στόχος της
σταθεροποίησης της περιοχής κινδυνεύει από τη συμφωνία, ακριβώς επειδή το
πολιτικό μίγμα στην Ελλάδα και τη Μακεδονία είναι τόσο ασταθές».
Μάλιστα, υποστηρίζει ότι στη γειτονική μας χώρα η αλλαγή
ονόματος «υποστηρίζεται από ένα συνασπισμό μιας μειοψηφία της κυρίαρχης σλαβομακεδονικής εθνοτικής
ομάδας και την εθνοτική Αλβανική
μειονότητα, ενώ
είναι αντίθετη η πλειοψηφία των Σλαβομακεδόνων.
Με άλλα λόγια, η Συμφωνία βάζει
ένα συνασπισμό μειονοτήτων απέναντι στην πλειοψηφία της πλειοψηφίας. Ένα τέτοιο
σκηνικό θα ανάψει και πάλι τις εθνοτικές εντάσεις και θα αυξήσει την πολιτική
πόλωση στη Μακεδονία».
Το TIME ολοκληρώνει
την αποδόμηση της Συμφωνίας των Πρεσπών ως εξής: «Σε μια περίοδο με σοβαρά προβλήματα στο κράτος
δικαίου σε ορισμένα κράτη-μέλη της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσηςκαι λαϊκές αναταραχές σε άλλα, μια τέτοια προσέγγιση στα
προβλήματα της Ευρώπης είναι κοντόφθαλμη και αυτοκαταστροφική».
Ολόκληρο το άρθρο του TIME στα
αγγλικά:
Macedonia’s Name
Change Deal Is a Triumph for the E.U., But Worrying for Democracy
Last June, in the picturesque lake region of
Prespes, Greece and Macedonia seemed to set aside decades of hostility, as
leaders from both countries signed an accord to rename the former Yugoslav
republic. Under that eponymous agreement, signed in the presence of European
and U.N. officials, Macedonia will become the Republic of North Macedonia. And
now, after six months of trying to secure approval by both parliaments, a deal
to resolve one of the most intractable — and to many outside observers
incomprehensible — bilateral disputes in the Balkans is close to fruition.
After Macedonia enacted all necessary changes in
its constitution, the Prespes deal is now very close to ratification by Greece
as well, with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras winning a vote of confidence
in Athens on Jan. 16 — called because of disagreements in his coalition over
the agreement. The name-change deal is now expected to be ratified by Greece
later this week, which will pave the way for North Macedonia’s entry to NATO
and the start of negotiations to discuss it joining the European Union.
After the disintegration of Yugoslavia in 1991,
Greece’s northern neighbor took the name “Macedonia”—but Athens refused to
recognize it, saying it gave legitimacy to territorial claims over the northern
Greek province of Macedonia. (The U.N. calls it “the former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia.”) The dispute has led Athens to repeatedly block its neighbor’s
attempts to join NATO and the E.U., a cause of concern for European leaders who
want to strengthen those alliances in the face of Russian aggression.
Even though the dispute between the two countries
is centered on the legal question of the official name of a country, it touches
upon emotional issues of history and identity in both countries. For the
citizens of what will soon be “North Macedonia,” the term “Macedonia” is a
marker of their distinct national identity in the Balkans. For Greeks on the
other hand, Macedonia is intertwined with important periods and personalities
in a historical narrative that extends back to ancient times. Under the weight
of still vivid memories of conflict and war during the 20th century, the two
nations have found it impossible to reconcile on a jointly agreed understanding
and use of the word ‘Macedonia’—until last summer. And still, the leaders of
both countries have come up against deeply entrenched nationalist attitudes.
The E.U. has supported the agreement throughout
all the stages of its negotiation, signing and ratification. For the E.U., the
Prespes deal represents all that is good about multilateralism and the
rules-based international order at a time when these values are under attack by
nationalism and populism in Europe, and by President Donald Trump and Russia
further afield. It clears a stumbling block in its enlargement to the Western
Balkans and puts back on track its project of transforming this region by
enmeshing it in its institutional and legal order. For the E.U. the Prespes
agreement then is both a geopolitical victory and a vindication of its vision
of how international politics should work.
But there are three problems with this narrative.
Due political process
The E.U. has chosen to ignore problematic
aspects of a ratification process that has challenged constitutional norms and
rule of law principles in both Macedonia and Greece. Because both Tsipras and
Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev have razor-thin majorities in their
parliaments, pushing through the deal in both countries has required political
bargaining that has pushed the limits of legality.
In Macedonia, Zaev, who lacked the two-thirds
majority in parliament to change Macedonia’s constitution, used both threats of
judicial prosecutions for corruption and a questionable law of partial amnesty
to induce opposition lawmakers to vote for his constitutional amendments.
Opposition MPs in Skopje were reportedly under immense pressure by both
supporters and opponents of Prespes, including foreign governments, to vote
accordingly. Each side has accused the other of threatening physical violence
or promising bribes.
In Athens, the situation is even more
convoluted. Tsipras’s government survived the vote of no confidence in order to
ratify Prespes, but its minuscule majority relies on some opponents of the
deal, who were lured with the promise of government jobs. Instead, Tsipras
expects to ratify the agreement this week by peeling off MPs from smaller
opposition parties, potentially to be rewarded with inclusion in the electoral
lists of his party in forthcoming elections. Tsipras has already been accused
by the opposition in recent months for undue meddling in the judiciary, media
and the army. Now, his patching up of ad hoc majorities for different votes in
parliament has challenged norms of parliamentary and constitutional procedure
and contributed to the further mistrust of the political systems by Greek
citizens.
For the E.U., concerns over rule of law and due
political process should be taken seriously—particularly at a time when many of
its member-states struggle with authoritarianism and illiberalism. Meanwhile,
all Balkan states that the E.U. hopes to welcome one day continue suffer from persistent
problems of corruption and strongman politics. In a world defined by the
struggle between liberal democracy and populism, process matters as much as
content. The process through which Prespes is being ratified leaves a lot to be
desired.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (R) and
Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev raise their hands during a signing
ceremony between officials from Greece and Macedonia at Prespes Lake on June
17, 2018.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (R) and
Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev raise their hands during a signing
ceremony between officials from Greece and Macedonia at Prespes Lake on June
17, 2018. Sakis Mitrolidis—AFP/Getty Images
An unpopular deal
Second, both governments are pushing through
Prespes against the wishes of large parts of their countries. In Macedonia, the
government failed to win a consultative referendum on Prespes in September — a
vote that the E.U. has chosen to ignore. In Greece all opinion polling shows a
strong popular majority against the deal.
Protestors have staged massive demonstrations
against the deal, including one on Sunday that was dispersed forcefully by
police and that produced images reminiscent of the darkest days of the Eurozone
crisis and the violent anti-austerity demonstrations in Athens. Just a few
months before a European Parliament election where populists are expected to
score gains, the E.U. seems yet again to be presenting itself as a bureaucracy
bent on ignoring popular reactions and the sovereignty of weaker states.
Reigniting
tensions
Finally, even the geopolitical goal of
stabilization of the region is endangered by the deal, precisely because the
political mix in Greece and Macedonia is so volatile. In Macedonia the
name-change is supported by a coalition of a minority of the dominant
Slav-Macedonian ethnic group and Macedonia’s ethnic Albanian minority, while it
is opposed by the majority of Slav-Macedonians. In other words, the deal pits a
coalition of minorities against a majority of the majority. Such an arrangement
is bound to reignite ethnic tensions and increase political polarization in
Macedonia—the exact opposite of the E.U.’s intention.
In Greece, on the other hand, Prespes tarnishes
public perception of the E.U., interrupting a period of slow and painful rehabilitation
after the Eurozone crisis of 2010-15. In a country still scarred by the
economic crisis and always susceptible to populist relapses, the rekindling of
nationalism by an E.U.-sponsored deal runs against the E.U.’s interest of
stability in a Eurozone member-state.
The E.U.’s support for the Prespes agreement
flows from admirable ideals of European integration. But it is also another
example of a bureaucratized mode of governing that often ignores political
realities and popular sensibilities. Most of all, it reflects a
self-congratulatory attitude that views E.U. accession and membership as a
cure-all for complex ethnic, economic and social problems, but also tolerates
bargains with questionable national elites and turns a blind eye to their methods
as long as they achieve pro-E.U. results on the ground. At a time of serious
problems with the rule of law in some E.U. member-states and popular upheaval
in others, such an approach to Europe’s problems is short-sighted and
self-defeating.
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