Fresh protests rock Macedonia as outrage grows over wiretap pardons
4/15/2016 9:24:43 AM
Thousands took to the streets of the Macedonian capital for a third consecutive evening Thursday to protest against the president's shock decision to halt probes into more than 50 public figures embroiled in a wire-tapping scandal.
The demonstrators, many of them supporters of the main opposition SDSM party, whistled and chanted "Resignation!", "No justice, no peace!" an AFP reporter at the scene said.
Similar anti-government protests in the capital had turned violent on Wednesday, when demonstrators ransacked the offices used by President Gjorge Ivanov's team and set fire to the furniture.
"We will not give up," 53-year old protester Jasmina Stojkovska Simonovic told AFP, adding that she wanted the president "to reverse his decision (on the probe) or to resign."
With concern over the turmoil growing, European Union and United States representatives in Skopje appealed to protesters to refrain from further violence.
"Peaceful demonstration is a fundamental democratic right. Violence and vandalism is not," US ambassador Jess Baily said on Twitter.
SDSM leader Zoran Zaev, who joined the latest protests, also called "for calm" while urging police "not to overstep their powers."
The unrest comes after the president on Tuesday said he had ended a judicial inquiry into the wiretapping controversy, effectively granting a mass amnesty to those implicated.
The move sparked condemnation at home and abroad, with the US and the EU warning it raised questions about the rule of law and could hurt Macedonia's aspirations to join the 28-member bloc.
- President remains defiant -
Ivanov remained defiant and said in an interview Thursday, broadcast live on national television, that his main motive was to put an end to the political crisis.
"As president, it is my responsibility to end the crisis that has lasted for too long," he said.
Macedonia's political woes began last year when the SDSM accused then prime minister Nikola Gruevski of wiretapping some 20,000 people, including politicians and journalists, and said the recordings revealed high-level corruption.
The government denied the accusations and in return filed charges against Zaev, accusing him of "spying" and attempting to "destabilise" the Balkan country.
The original scandal triggered protests in Skopje, eventually prompting the EU to step in and mediate.
Gruevski stepped down as premier in January, paving the way for early elections on June 5 -- but the opposition has announced a boycott, saying it fears electoral fraud.
Ivanov's decision to end the legal proceedings against 56 people, including top politicians, businessmen, judges, prosecutors and mayors, came into effect Wednesday when his decree was published in the official gazette.
The list includes Gruevski -- an ally of the president and still Macedonia's most influential political figure -- as well as former interior minister Gordana Jankulovska and ex-intelligence chief Sasho Mijalkov.
Zaev and former SDSM leader and ex-president Branko Crvenkovski were also on the list of those amnestied by the president's move, although both have said they would rather see the probe go ahead.
A special prosecutor had been probing the allegations but her office was caught by surprise by Ivanov's decision to shelve the inquiry.
EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini's spokeswoman Maja Kocijancic expressed "serious concerns" with the amnesty.
"This decision risks producing a climate of impunity, undermines the rule of law and years of efforts within the country and by the international community, as well as exacerbating the existing political crisis," she said Thursday.
- 'Mass pardon = impunity' -
The US State Department voiced similar objections on Wednesday, with spokesman John Kirby saying Ivanov's decision would "protect corrupt officials and deny justice to the people of Macedonia".
In Macedonia itself, the amnesty was denounced by all political parties -- including Ivanov's own VMRO-DPMNE.
"No one in VMRO-DPMNE feels guilty and this is why no one among us wanted to have a halt to proceedings," party leader Gruevski told a press conference.
President Ivanov has however received support from Moscow, which accused outside forces of fomenting the unrest.
"The opposition, with the outside help, is again used for stirring political conflict with the goal to disturb the elections scheduled for June 5, 2016, the only democratic way to solve this long crisis," the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement Thursday.
EU and US representatives met the president for talks on Thursday, but gave no details of what was discussed.
"Mass pardon = impunity = obstacle to credible elections, Euro-Atlantic path," US ambassador Baily tweeted after the meeting.
by Jasmina Mironski and Rusmir Smajilhodzic
The demonstrators, many of them supporters of the main opposition SDSM party, whistled and chanted "Resignation!", "No justice, no peace!" an AFP reporter at the scene said.
Similar anti-government protests in the capital had turned violent on Wednesday, when demonstrators ransacked the offices used by President Gjorge Ivanov's team and set fire to the furniture.
"We will not give up," 53-year old protester Jasmina Stojkovska Simonovic told AFP, adding that she wanted the president "to reverse his decision (on the probe) or to resign."
With concern over the turmoil growing, European Union and United States representatives in Skopje appealed to protesters to refrain from further violence.
"Peaceful demonstration is a fundamental democratic right. Violence and vandalism is not," US ambassador Jess Baily said on Twitter.
SDSM leader Zoran Zaev, who joined the latest protests, also called "for calm" while urging police "not to overstep their powers."
The unrest comes after the president on Tuesday said he had ended a judicial inquiry into the wiretapping controversy, effectively granting a mass amnesty to those implicated.
The move sparked condemnation at home and abroad, with the US and the EU warning it raised questions about the rule of law and could hurt Macedonia's aspirations to join the 28-member bloc.
- President remains defiant -
Ivanov remained defiant and said in an interview Thursday, broadcast live on national television, that his main motive was to put an end to the political crisis.
"As president, it is my responsibility to end the crisis that has lasted for too long," he said.
Macedonia's political woes began last year when the SDSM accused then prime minister Nikola Gruevski of wiretapping some 20,000 people, including politicians and journalists, and said the recordings revealed high-level corruption.
The government denied the accusations and in return filed charges against Zaev, accusing him of "spying" and attempting to "destabilise" the Balkan country.
The original scandal triggered protests in Skopje, eventually prompting the EU to step in and mediate.
Gruevski stepped down as premier in January, paving the way for early elections on June 5 -- but the opposition has announced a boycott, saying it fears electoral fraud.
Ivanov's decision to end the legal proceedings against 56 people, including top politicians, businessmen, judges, prosecutors and mayors, came into effect Wednesday when his decree was published in the official gazette.
The list includes Gruevski -- an ally of the president and still Macedonia's most influential political figure -- as well as former interior minister Gordana Jankulovska and ex-intelligence chief Sasho Mijalkov.
Zaev and former SDSM leader and ex-president Branko Crvenkovski were also on the list of those amnestied by the president's move, although both have said they would rather see the probe go ahead.
A special prosecutor had been probing the allegations but her office was caught by surprise by Ivanov's decision to shelve the inquiry.
EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini's spokeswoman Maja Kocijancic expressed "serious concerns" with the amnesty.
"This decision risks producing a climate of impunity, undermines the rule of law and years of efforts within the country and by the international community, as well as exacerbating the existing political crisis," she said Thursday.
- 'Mass pardon = impunity' -
The US State Department voiced similar objections on Wednesday, with spokesman John Kirby saying Ivanov's decision would "protect corrupt officials and deny justice to the people of Macedonia".
In Macedonia itself, the amnesty was denounced by all political parties -- including Ivanov's own VMRO-DPMNE.
"No one in VMRO-DPMNE feels guilty and this is why no one among us wanted to have a halt to proceedings," party leader Gruevski told a press conference.
President Ivanov has however received support from Moscow, which accused outside forces of fomenting the unrest.
"The opposition, with the outside help, is again used for stirring political conflict with the goal to disturb the elections scheduled for June 5, 2016, the only democratic way to solve this long crisis," the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement Thursday.
EU and US representatives met the president for talks on Thursday, but gave no details of what was discussed.
"Mass pardon = impunity = obstacle to credible elections, Euro-Atlantic path," US ambassador Baily tweeted after the meeting.
by Jasmina Mironski and Rusmir Smajilhodzic