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The Republic of Macedonia, also known under the temporary UN reference as Former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia (FYR Macedonia or FYROM)1, is an independent state on the Balkan peninsula in southeastern Europe, with an area of 25,713 km² and a population of just over two million. Its capital and principal city is
Skopje (population 600,000).
The Republic contains roughly 38% of the area and nearly 44% of the population of the geographical region known as Macedonia, the remainder of which is divided between neighbouring Greece (with about half of the total) and Bulgaria (with under a
tenth). The lands governed by the Republic of Macedonia were known as the Vardarska
banovina before 1945.
From 1945 until its proclamation of independence on 17 September
1991, the Republic of Macedonia was one of the six constituent republics of the Socialist Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia.
Naming dispute
Following Macedonia's independence, the Greek government raised objections
concerning:
- The name: Macedonia was claimed by Greece to be a Greek name, already in use for the Greek region of Macedonia.
- The flag: the sixteen-ray "Vergina Sun" star that was to appear on the
flag was a symbol of the ancient state of Macedon, to which Greece claimed to be the
sole heir. (For more on this, see Vergina.)
- The constitution: a reference in Article 49 to the Republic caring "for the status and rights of those persons belonging to
the Macedonian people in neighboring countries, as well as Macedonian expatriates, assist[ing] their cultural development and
promot[ing] links with them," which Greece interpreted as encouraging separatism among its own Macedonian Slav minority.
As a result, the United Nations recognised the state in 1993 under the temporary reference of the "Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia". However, Greece,
still dissatisfied, imposed a trade embargo on the Republic of Macedonia in February 1994.
As part of an agreement to lift this embargo in September 1995, the Republic of Macedonia's
flag was changed to an eight-ray sun and not the former star. The constitution was also changed to state explicitly that "The
Republic of Macedonia has no territorial pretensions towards any neighboring state."
Given the long name, the state is often referred to as Macedonia colloquially and by non-Greeks despite the ambiguity
of the term with the region of Macedonia. The state's name remains a source of local and international controversy. After the
state was admitted to the United Nations under the FYROM name, other
international organisations adopted the same convention, including the European Union, the European
Broadcasting Union, NATO and the International Olympic Committee, among others. Most diplomats are accredited to the
republic using the FYROM designation. The usage of each name remains controversial to supporters of the other. However, at least
40 countries have recognised the country by its constitutional name – the Republic of Macedonia, rather than FYROM. These
include the Philippines, Iran, Estonia, Malaysia, Russia, Pakistan, China,
Bulgaria, Turkey, Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Serbia and
Montenegro, Ukraine, Belarus,
Lithuania, the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus,
and others. A permanent agreement on how the Macedonian republic should be referred to internationally has not yet been
reached.
Languages
The mother tongue of some 1.3 million of the state's inhabitants is the Macedonian, a south Slavic language
related to Old Slavonic. Albanian is spoken by around 500,000 people and Turkish by 80,000. There are an estimated 120,000 Romany speakers.
Recent history
The republic remained at peace through the violent ethnic conflicts which convulsed the former Yugoslavia's western republics,
Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia, in 1991-1995 but the influx of an estimated 360,000 ethnic
Albanian refugees from neighbouring Kosovo
in 1999 threatened to destabilize the republic.
A brief armed conflict in March 2001 involving Albanian rebels in the west of the
country ended with the intervention of a small NATO ceasefire monitoring force and government undertakings to concede greater rights to
the Albanian minority.
On February 26, 2004, President
Boris Trajkovski died in a plane crash. The results of the official
investigation revealed that the cause of the plane accident was procedural mistakes by the crew, committed during the approach to
land at Mostar airport.
From the CIA World Factbook 2000 / 2001.
External links
Official Government Sites
Other
Unofficial websites
Notes
- ¹ The location of this article is not meant to imply an official position on this naming dispute.
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