Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 2 minutes ago
Premier Mickoski twierdzi, że Macedonia Północna była „zastraszana” na drodze do członkostwa w UE

Macedonia Północna, która spędziła ponad dwie dekady, czekając na przyjęcie do UE, ma nadzieję, że oczekiwanie w końcu dobiegnie końca. Premier Mickoski powiedział w wywiadzie dla Euronews, że przystąpienie jego kraju do UE zostało opóźnione z powodu „sztucznych sporów”.

CZYTAJ WIĘCEJ : http://pl.euronews.com/2025/11/10/premier-mickoski-twierdzi-ze-macedonia-polnocna-byla-zastraszana-na-drodze-do-czlonkostwa-

Zasubskrybuj nasz kanał.Euronews jest dostępny na Dailymotion w 12 językach

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00punkt
00:08Idille urodz advisek 9 irr sił
00:12udział live w 21 webinars
00:14Ministerza Miec
00:17miście
00:18thank you for being here
00:19thank your for the bagnieve
00:21you are at meillä
00:24character you flying
00:26the country you do the application in
00:28w marcu 2004.
00:30Practycznie,
00:32zaczęliśmy tę drogę
00:34więcej niż dwa lata temu,
00:36dwa lata temu,
00:3825 lat temu.
00:4025 lat temu
00:42zakończyliśmy
00:44Stabilizacją i Associação
00:46z Europą.
00:48Znaczyliśmy
00:50z 2005,
00:52razem z Kroatią.
00:54Znaczyliśmy
00:56zakończyliśmy
00:58zakończyliśmy
01:00w 2009 roku
01:02razem z Kroatią.
01:04Znaczyliśmy,
01:06jesteśmy w tym samym miejscu,
01:07gdzie jesteśmy
01:0825 lat temu.
01:10Znaczyliśmy,
01:12nie dlatego, że
01:14nie dlatego, że
01:16nie dlatego, że
01:17nie dlatego, że
01:19nie dlatego, że
01:20nie dlatego, że
01:21nie dlatego, że
01:23to, że
01:25nasze nazwisko,
01:26nasze nazwisko,
01:27nasze nazwisko,
01:29nasza kanalne,
01:30nasza kanalne,
01:31nasza kanalne,
01:32jest to,
01:33to, że
01:34tak,
01:35jeszcze raz,
01:36dodatkowe,
01:37Więc to nie chodzi o wyświetlenie i wyświetlenie wyświetlenie.
01:43To nie chodzi o wyświetlenie.
01:45Jak się czuje, że za około dwa tygodnie, w stanie się wyświetlować,
01:50że jeszcze więcej i więcej drogów?
01:53Myślę, że nasze przyszłość jest w Europie Unii.
01:58Jesteśmy częścią Europy kontinentu.
02:01I wierzymy, że integracja z Europą w Europie w Europie,
02:06to znaczy added value dla Europie itself.
02:09I to znaczy re-unification, na pewien sposób,
02:14na pewien kontinentie europejskiego.
02:17Myślę, że przyszłość mojej kraj i przyszłość mojej nacji,
02:21Macedonii, jest w Europie Unii.
02:25Dlatego, po prostu, podczas tych umiliacji i dyspozycji,
02:30I poświęcony z obecną frustracją, która jest w środku naszych czterech,
02:35we do share the same values.
02:37Let's talk a little more in detail about some of those.
02:41Right after finding an arrangement with Greece,
02:44you then faced a veto from Bulgaria.
02:48And this is the current situation.
02:50This issue of unanimity and then the vetoes, obviously,
02:53is a very important conversation.
02:55And do you know exactly how long it can take?
02:59We know what unanimity means for us
03:03and what type of sacrifice we've did in the past.
03:10But nevertheless, this is the past.
03:11I would like to talk about the current situation.
03:17When there was a PRESP agreement on the table
03:20and when this name issue was on the table,
03:25a lot of people from all over the world came into our capital in Skopje,
03:31trying to convince us that, look, you are the frontrunners in the region.
03:36You are far, far ahead compared with the other countries from the Western Balkans.
03:40immediately when you will provide solution for this dispute,
03:44then probably immediately you've become a member of NATO
03:48and it will take probably four or five years
03:52and you will become a member of the EU.
03:54Those four or five years expired two years ago.
03:57And we are at the same place where we were two and a half decades ago.
04:03Why? Because now a new hurdle, new constraint is in front of us.
04:08Again, change of a constitution.
04:10We need to add into the preambula of our constitution,
04:16which is a descriptive part of our constitution,
04:20a part of Bulgarian people which are living in our country.
04:26And according to the last census data,
04:28we are talking about a couple of hundred people.
04:31We are not talking about millions.
04:33We are not talking about hundreds of thousands of people.
04:35We are talking about literally a couple of hundred people,
04:39which declared during the last census
04:43that their mother tongue is Bulgarian language.
04:47But however, citizens of my country, full of frustration,
04:52are asking me, okay, Prime Minister, what is now?
04:55What is now the problem?
04:57Why we need to change our constitution again?
05:02Okay, if we do this, this will be the last one,
05:08or probably there will be some additional in the future.
05:12Why we need to bring a couple of hundred citizens of our country
05:17into our constitution?
05:20We are talking about violation of someone's human rights.
05:24Who we are politicians to judge,
05:26whether someone's rights has been violated or not.
05:30We can only misuse that issue.
05:32The real institution,
05:34which is judging whether someone's rights has been violated or not,
05:37is in Strasbourg.
05:39And what European Court for Human Rights says,
05:44during the last couple of years,
05:4614 times in favor of Macedonian community in Bulgaria,
05:53and zero times in favor of Bulgarian community in my country.
05:59So, then there is another question, additional question.
06:02Why we should change our constitution then?
06:06Why we are not talking about Macedonian community in Bulgaria?
06:10What about their human rights?
06:13What about their human rights?
06:15Because they are not allowed to register non-governmental organization.
06:20We are not talking about change of Bulgarian constitution.
06:24We are not talking about a sort of reciprocity.
06:28We are talking about registering non-governmental organization.
06:32And what we are saying, okay,
06:34previous, the best corruptive government in Europe,
06:39accepted that deal to change constitution,
06:42suspending the parliament in my country,
06:45suspending the voice of the parliament in my country,
06:49and they are now in the history.
06:52There is a new government,
06:53and this new government is saying,
06:54okay, those guys,
06:58those ladies and gentlemen accepted,
07:02But what about international law?
07:05What about resolution that is protecting human rights
07:10in the countries which are in the perimeter of the European Union?
07:15How do you communicate that specifically with this community?
07:19How do you build this dialogue with them,
07:23trying to convince them, probably, or explain it to them?
07:28You mean about the Bulgarian community?
07:31They have all the rights.
07:33Our constitution is that like.
07:36They have literally all the rights.
07:39Practically, they are a part of our institutions.
07:43But okay, again, I'm saying, okay,
07:45they are in, we are out.
07:47This is a bit of bullying, okay?
07:49We would like to see ourselves on the table in Brussels.
07:54And what is now the price?
07:56And whether this is the last price that we should pay?
07:59This is the real question.
08:01How do you see the other EU membership hopefuls,
08:04the candidate countries,
08:06who are facing quite similar obstacles on their path?
08:10What would be some kind of piece of advice
08:12that you could share with your experience?
08:14Again, given that you had to overcome first one veto,
08:18then the second one veto,
08:19and then, as you said, who knows which one might come next?
08:24I can't remember a similar case.
08:28Maybe in the past that was a dispute between Slovenia and Croatia.
08:33In the meantime...
08:34There is a certain veto happening now with the candidate countries,
08:37as we've heard with the president of Ukraine and the Hungarian.
08:39I'm talking about the past.
08:41About the current situation, I'm not surprised.
08:44I'm not surprised that the similar situation will occur in the future.
08:48Because if someone is witnessing that this veto tool works,
08:54then we should apply the same recipe.
08:57Why not?
08:58Because if someone dares to bully someone else who wants to join the club,
09:04why the others should be silent?
09:06This is not normal.
09:08If we are accepting that principle once,
09:13then this principle will destroy all the values
09:16developed by Degasperi, Schumann and Adonauer
09:19when this organization was developed.
09:22So, the European Union itself should ask themselves,
09:27what we are doing?
09:29What we are doing with this unanimity?
09:32And is it according to the principles and values
09:36based on which we have been developed?
09:40And in this current situation,
09:42my final question to you would be,
09:44how disappointing it is for average Macedonians
09:48to, as you say, for over two decades to be...
09:51These are generations who have been waiting for over two decades
09:55yet facing these roadblocks.
09:57Very much.
09:58Are they losing the motivation to join the European Union?
10:00No, definitely.
10:01The support is the highest in the region maybe,
10:03or among the highest in the region.
10:05I'm working as a professor and teaching mechatronics.
10:08For me, it was in my previous life.
10:11Now I'm the Prime Minister for almost a year and a half.
10:17But I was very sorry when I was witnessing how my students
10:21are willing to depart from the country.
10:24Why?
10:25Because simply they were missing hope.
10:28They felt hopeless.
10:30And most of them are living now in the European countries,
10:38in the EU countries.
10:40When I was elected as a Prime Minister, I said,
10:43OK, this is a hurdle.
10:45Probably there will be a lot of challenges in front of us
10:49until the very end.
10:51This is the destiny of the small nations.
10:54because the big ones are doing what they can
10:56and the small ones are doing what they must.
10:58Unfortunately, we are small.
11:00But let's do our homework.
11:02Let's finish our homework.
11:03Let's create a good environment.
11:05Let's bring back home youngsters
11:08and let's develop something that will be good for them.
11:12And let's deliver homework that will impress EU.
11:17And maybe then someone from EU will say enough is enough.
11:21Let's do something for them.
11:23Otherwise, this is damaging our values
11:28and practically this does not have a future.
11:32And that's why I do believe that we need to finish our homework
11:36and we are delivering since we were elected as a government.
11:41Thank you very much.
11:42We'll have to wrap it up here.
11:43Thank you for this experience and for sharing it with us here
11:46for the enlargement talks.
11:48That was 12 minutes with Prime Minister of North Macedonia,
11:51Kristian Mitskoski.
11:52Thank you.
11:53Thank you for the invitation.
Be the first to comment
Add your comment

Recommended