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ΚΑΙ ΝΑ ΘΕΣ ΝΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΠΑΡΕΙΣ ΣΤΑ ΣΟΒΑΡΑ ΟΤΑΝ ΒΛΕΠΕΙΣ ΤΕΤΟΙΑ ΚΑΡΑΚΙΤΣΑΡΙΑ ΚΑΙ ΕΝΑ ΤΕΤΟΙΟ ΑΤΕΛΕΙΩΤΟ ΤΣΙΡΚΟ…ΔΕΝ ΜΠΟΡΕΙΣ!!!

 

Ο ΜΕΣΑΙΟΣ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΟΛΑ ΤΑ ΛΕΦΤΑ, ΟΠΩΣ ΚΑΙ Ο ΤΖΙΝΑΤΟΣ ΣΤΗΝ ΑΚΡΗ!!!

ΣΙΓΑ…ΘΑ ΒΓΑΛΕΤΕ ΚΑΝΕΝΑ ΜΑΤΙ!!!

ΤΟ ΤΣΙΡΚΟ ΕΧΕΙ ΞΕΚΙΝΗΣΕΙ ΓΙΑ ΤΑ ΚΑΛΑ…

ΚΑΙ Ο ΚΟΣΜΟΣ ΓΕΛΑΕΙ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ ΨΥΧΗ ΤΟΥ!!!

ΟΥΤΕ Ο ΜΕΓΑΣ ΚΩΝΣΤ/ΝΟΣ ΜΕ ΤΟΝ ΙΟΥΣΤΙΝΙΑΝΟ ΚΑΙ ΤΗΝ ΑΓ. ΕΛΕΝΗ ΤΗΝ ΓΛΥΤΩΣΑΝ!!

Η ΠΕΡΙΦΗΜΗ ΣΚΟΠΙΑΝΙΚΗ “ΦΑΛΑΓΓΑ”

ΚΑΙ ΜΙΑ ΑΝΑΜΝΗΣΤΙΚΗ ΦΩΤΟ ΜΕ ΟΛΕΣ ΣΧΕΔΟΝ ΤΙΣ ΦΙΡΜΕΣ (ΚΛΕΟΠΑΤΡΑ ΠΤΟΛΟΜΑΓΙΟΒΑ, ΦΙΛΙΠ ΜΑΚΕΝΤΟΝΣΚΙ, ΕΝΑΣ ΠΟΥ ΦΕΡΕΙ ΛΙΓΟ ΤΟΥ…ΤΡΑΜΠΑΚΟΥΛΑ, ΚΑΠΟΙΟΣ ΠΟΥ ΜΑΛΛΟΝ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΡΑΚΟΣΥΛΛΕΚΤΗΣ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΤΙ ΑΛΛΕΣ…ΜΟΡΦΕΣ!!)

ΑΞΙΟΙ, ΑΞΙΟΙ!!!!

ΕΥΧΑΡΙΣΤΟΥΜΕ ΤΟΝ ΦΙΛΟ ΓΡΗΓΟΡΗ ΓΙΑ ΤΙΣ ΦΩΤΟΣ (ΚΑΙ ΤΟ ΓΕΛΙΟ!)

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Its surprising that in FYROM, a place where the state-imposed propaganda has almost succeed in silencing the openminded voices that dare to speak the truth, we will find sources which speak their minds against the ultra-nationalistic general tedencies. One example of the latter comes from the site of Inter Kont travel Agency: (interkont.com.mk/en/12.htm). Our compliments to the site owners and we hope their openmindness finds more examples in their country.

 

 

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Διαβάστε προσεκτικά να συνειδητοποιήσετε για μια ακόμα φορά την απροκάλυπτη βοήθεια, της  κυβέρνησης Bush προς τα Σκόπια όπως επίσης την θρασύτατη παρέμβαση και τις συστάσεις που ακολούθησαν απο τον ανιστόρητου Daniel Fried προς τους Σκοπιανούς. (Προσέξτε το ανιστόρητο σχόλιο του “Think back 100 years to Macedonia’s emergence from the end of the Ottoman Empire”) Φυσικά με ένα ανύπαρκτο ΥΠΕΞ βρίσκουν και τα κάνουν!!! Με κόκκινα γράμματα τα καίρια σημεία.

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The Future for Macedonia

Daniel Fried, Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs
Remarks With “Macedonian” Journalists
Washington, DC
October 27, 2008

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: On Friday I attended the ceremony at the White House where President Bush signed the accession protocols for Albania and Croatia’s membership in NATO. That was a good day, but it was only two-thirds of a great day. Of course you know what I’m referring to.

President Bush said that we are reserving a place at the NATO table for Macedonia. And let me be clear how much this would mean. Think back 100 years to Macedonia’s emergence from the end of the Ottoman Empire. It has been a long and difficult road with war, nationalism, communism, conquest, destruction and uncertainty. But now the future for Macedonia could be very bright indeed.

NATO membership and EU membership after that means that the Macedonian state will not simply exist in isolation, but will exist as part of a united Europe. It would be a huge and historical breakthrough in the Macedonian struggle for identity and for security and for a future for all of the people that live there. That is why we hope that Macedonia’s leaders will show the wisdom and courage to resolve the painful and difficult issue of the name.

I was in Bucharest, of course, when there was a lack of consensus at NATO so Macedonia did not receive an invitation. That was painful. And we understand why it’s painful, but a solution is possible. The United States supports the efforts of Matt Nimetz. He’s a good negotiator; he’s a fair negotiator; and he’s trying to get this solved.

Time will not make this easier. I hope that Macedonia is able to work with Nimetz based on his most recent proposal and try to resolve this. This has to do with the future of Macedonia. The short term difficulty of a resolution should be seen in terms of the long term gain for the whole nation. I will do my best to help to support Matt Nimetz, working as best I can, but the solution is up to the Government of Macedonia and of course the Government of Greece. I urge Macedonia’s leaders to choose Europe and not to choose isolation.

I also want to say we’ve had excellent relations with Macedonia for years. We appreciate what Macedonia has done to build a truly multinational state and political system. The Ohrid Accords showed a degree of — not a degree, considerable political wisdom and devotion to democratic norms. The country has done a lot to avoid the catastrophic problems of the Balkans, of nationalism in the Balkans. So that’s a good basis to build a good future.

So we look for a bright future for Macedonia. I’ll stop here and take your questions.

 

Question: I think you mentioned that our government, our leaders should work on the last proposal with Nimetz. Probably you heard that both [inaudible] –

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: I understand.

 

Question: They agree that this proposal is not acceptable for Macedonia.

You mentioned also that they should use their wisdom. What does it mean? What kind of wisdom they could use in this situation?

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: I realize that the proposal doesn’t meet everything that Macedonia wants. No proposal will satisfy both sides. No proposal can leave both sides with nothing. Everybody must give up something, everybody must get something, or else there’s no solution.

I said, on the basis of Nimetz’s proposal. If there are, the government should decide what it can accept and what the very few, there have to be a very limited number of things that it needs changed and start working to know the differences. Otherwise we just go in circles, and there’s no solution.

I appreciate the strength the leaders of Macedonia have shown in defending your country, but it is also defense of the country to open the door to NATO and the European Union. That also defends Macedonia and promotes its interests, it seems to me.

 

Question: It is a question of identity. It is not a question only of the name. All the proposals which are coming from the [inaudible], it’s really, they [inaudible] nation.

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: If Macedonia joins NATO and the European Union and develops its democracy and its economy and its institutions and is a success, your identity will develop from that success.

The negotiations aren’t going to change Macedonians’ internal sense of who they are. Macedonians can have confidence that if they are a successful country the issue of identity will not seem so difficult. If people think — I believe it is a mistake to think that your identity is a hostage of the negotiations.

My advice is get the best deal you can, get it done, join Europe, and your identity will flow from your success.

 

Question: So you said there’s no solution with which perhaps the two sides would be completely satisfied.

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: I said that no solution will give either side 100 percent.

 

Question: However the last proposal of Nimetz only satisfies the Greek side.

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: I don’t think that’s true. I think it is a better proposal than that.

I’ll tell you a story. I was at a NATO meeting in corridors and [Georgian President] Saakashvili said to me, I wish I had Macedonia’s problems for five minutes. [Laughter]. I wish the only thing that kept me out of NATO was the name. I would call Georgia just about anything if I could get it into NATO. I’d call it South Georgia, East Georgia, tiny little Georgia… Can I have their problems for five minutes?

 

Question: – said the Georgian people to identify them as Russians, for example.

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: But nobody’s asking you to identify yourselves as Russians, or Greeks.

 

Question: The last proposal is exactly that. Me as a Northern Macedonian –

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: No. No, it actually doesn’t say that. It doesn’t say that. It’s actually quite different. But I’m not the negotiator.

Do you know what the official name is of Switzerland? That’s right, you don’t. And I’m not sure myself. But it’s called Switzerland, isn’t it? Not the Helvetic Republic. That’s the official name. Everybody calls it Switzerland.

Isolation is not going to help. All right?

Look, I understand, it’s easy for an American to say this, but I say this as a long-time friend of Macedonia. It’s important to think of the opportunity now and not look back in ten years and say oh my God, I wish I could get back to where we were in 2008.

 

Question: Will it be more difficult to solve the name issue after the elections in the U.S.?

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: Well, Macedonia has no enemies in either the McCain or Obama teams. But I guarantee you that the next President will not understand this issue as well as President Bush does for quite a while. This administration has been particularly supportive of Macedonia. I’m not saying the next one won’t be, but President Bush really knows this issue personally. He spent about an hour with President Crvenkovski and Prime Minister Gruevski in Bucharest. It’s important that we get, if we can get close enough where the two sides aren’t that far apart, I know that Secretary Rice and the President are interested in bridging the last gap.

 

Question: [inaudible]

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: Oh, come on. Come on. They say lots of things. They also say that the United States is secretly in league with the Macedonian government against Greece. They say all kinds of things.

Sorry. I actually understood –

 

Question: [inaudible]

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: I’d put it this way. I think that NATO membership and EU membership benefits everyone. Of course, Albania is coming into NATO and Macedonia is not. It’s going to be painful. But painful for both ethnic Macedonians and ethnic Albanians in Macedonia. But perhaps painful in different ways. Painful.

All national identities in the world start off artificial. Why is there France and not Burgundy? Okay? Why are Norway and Sweden two countries instead of one? Why does the United States not include Canada? Because history took that course. Because things happen.

That doesn’t mean — Macedonian nationality isn’t artificial. It grows out of history. That’s what I mean. It grows out of a real history, and it’s real. It grows out of history, but it’s a painful history, like histories of all nations. It’s got wars in it and uncertainty. The difference is that everybody now remembers. It’s your grandfather’s stories of the war and the uncertainty, whereas nobody remembers the 14th Century in France.

My point is, if Macedonia, if you do a deal on the name, Macedonia joins NATO and the European Union and in 100 years no one will remember this. All they will know is Macedonia is in Europe. Everyone will say in 100 years, oh yeah, Gruevski, Crvenkovski, they’re the people who brought Macedonia to Europe. What great heroes.

 

Question: However they fear that they will be seen as traitors.

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: No. You know what I fear? I fear that Macedonia exists in isolation. That’s a lot worse. In the Balkans, doing the right thing is usually hard in the short run. I’d rather be a hero in a 100 years rather than a hero for 15 minutes right now. You know what I’m saying.

 

Question: You said that if the two sides were getting at least close to some point of reaching a solution, that Secretary Rice would make efforts to cross that last gap and have the issue solved. This was in relation to one of the questions, I think.

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: That’s right.

 

Question: Do you see that there is any chances of, do you see that point of the two sides getting close and having the solution reached? And what happens if that doesn’t happen actually and in three or five years we’re still without a solution?

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: Whether it happens or not depends on the actions of both governments. It isn’t just up to Macedonia. It isn’t just one government’s responsibility. It’s both. But Macedonia has to make its decisions, and Greece will have to make its decisions. So I don’t know how possible that is. That depends on what you do and then what Athens does.

Time is not going to help. There are some problems that are not going to get easier by neglecting them.

 

Question: Just hypothetically, if Macedonia decides to give up on the negotiation process, what would that mean in your opinion?

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: Well you tell me what — this is a rhetorical question — you tell me what happens to your country if you decide to try to live in isolation from every other country in the region that’s moving to NATO and the European Union. You tell me what your future looks like.

Do you want to tell your children that they still have to have visas to go to Europe but everybody else gets to work without visas, without any permission?

EU membership and NATO membership open up a great future. Do you want to tell your children, never mind, you get to live in Macedonia, and you need a visa to travel to Greece? Or Frankfurt or London? Is that what you want? That’s a rhetorical question.

Look, I will add one thing. Americans came to this country for a better life, and we all gave up a lot of our former identity. Okay? But nobody’s asking Macedonia to give up your identity. If you do a deal you’re going to define yourselves. What you call yourselves in reality, I don’t mean on the formal pieces of paper. What you call yourselves in reality, you’ll just do it.

 

Question: But you can see that there is a concern in Macedonia about what will change with the name to Northern Macedonia. For everybody here even in this room [inaudible] acceptable. But it’s not the end from the [inaudible]. It’s not the end of their demands, that is the problem.

Tomorrow Gruevski and Crvenkovski would sign the document, okay? We would be Northern Macedonia, as a member of all the international organizations in the [inaudible] relationship. But it’s obvious that that will not be the full stop from the Greek side.

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: You’re asking a question, if we accept the — basically you’re saying if we accept the proposal does that end it, or is it always more, more, more, more.

 

Question: Nobody will accept it actually.

 

Assistant Secretary Fried: I think if Macedonia were seen as accepting the Nimetz proposal, there would be huge pressure within Europe for Greece to also accept it and have the issue done. Done. Finished.

I think there are a lot of people in Greece who want this issue resolved. Besides, what have you got to lose? If you accept Nimetz’s proposal everybody will see that Macedonia is being responsible, then you will get more support.

Don’t lose such a favorable opportunity. NATO Ministers will meet in about five weeks. That’s time to do a lot of good.

I’ll end with this thought. President Bush said there’s a place at the NATO table waiting for Macedonia. Take it. Your children and your grandchildren will thank you.

But good luck.

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Ευχαριστούμε τον φίλο που μας έστειλε όλο το κείμενο.

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Βρυξέλλες,

Η Eυρωπαϊκή Επιτροπή δεν πρόκειται να εισηγηθεί την έναρξη ενταξιακών διαπραγματεύσεων με την ΠΓΔΜ, θεωρώντας ότι δεν πληροί τα κοινοτικά κριτήρια, ενώ θα χαρακτηρίζει καίριας σημασίας για την ενταξιακή προοπτική της γειτονικής χώρας την επίλυση του ζητήματος της ονομασίας.

Ο πρόεδρος της Πρώην Γιουγκοσλαβικής Δημοκρατίας της Μακεδονίας, Μπράνκο Τσερβένκοφσκι έχει να δώσει λύση στο πρόβλημα που αντιμετωπίζει με τον πρωθυπουργό του. Το περιεχόμενο της ετήσιας έκθεσης προόδου της ενταξιακής πορείας της ΠΓΔΜ, που θα υιοθετηθεί στη συνεδρίαση της προσεχούς Τετάρτης από την Ευρωπαϊκή Επιτροπή θα είναι απογοητευτικό για τα Σκόπια, δεδομένου ότι ο απολογισμός που κάνει η Κομισιόν δεν αφήνει κανένα περιθώριο περαιτέρω προσέγγισης με την Ε.Ε., τουλάχιστον για το επόμενο έτος.

Ειδικότερα, η Επιτροπή χαρακτηρίζει απογοητευτική τη διαδικασία των εθνικών εκλογών του περασμένου Ιουνίου, ενώ μεταξύ των προβλημάτων που καταγράφει είναι ο περιορισμένος διάλογος της κυβέρνησης με την αντιπολίτευση, η ανεπαρκής όσο και ανησυχητική λειτουργία των θεσμών, οι διώξεις πολιτικών αντιπάλων. Επιπλέον η υιοθέτηση με μεγάλη προχειρότητα νομοθετημάτων προσαρμογής της χώρας στο κοινοτικό κεκτημένο δεν αφήνει καμία δυνατότητα εφαρμογής τους.

Αναφορικά με τη ζήτημα της ονομασίας, η Ευρωπαϊκή Επιτροπή χρησιμοποιεί την παράγραφο των συμπερασμάτων του της Συνόδου Κορυφής του περασμένου Ιουνίου, τα οποία επισημαίνουν την καίρια σημασία που έχουν (για τα Σκόπια), η προώθηση σχέσεων καλής γειτονίας και η εξεύρεση αμοιβαία αποδεκτής λύσης. Για το λόγο αυτό επισημαίνεται η ανάγκη εντατικοποίησης των προσπαθειών προς επίλυση της διαφοράς περί την ονομασία υπό την αιγίδα των Ηνωμένων Εθνών.

Τονίζεται επίσης ότι:

1) το ζήτημα της ονομασίας συνεχίζει να επηρεάζει αρνητικά τις διμερείς σχέσεις Ελλάδας-ΠΓΔΜ

2) τα Σκόπια πρέπει να αποφεύγουν πράξεις που θα μπορούσαν να επηρεάσουν αρνητικά τις σχέσεις καλής γειτονίας

3) συνδέεται η ενταξιακή πορεία των Σκοπίων με τις επιδόσεις της χώρας αυτής στον τομέα της περιφερειακής συνεργασίας και των σχέσεων καλής γειτονίας.


Τέλος συμπεριλαμβάνεται για πρώτη φορά αναφορά για τις διαφωνίες που προκαλεί πλέον το ζήτημα του ονόματος μεταξύ των κομμάτων στην εσωτερική πολιτική σκηνή της ΠΓΔΜ, δηλαδή η «κόντρα» που υπάρχει σήμερα μεταξύ του προέδρου της Δημοκρατίας Μπράνκο Τσερβένκοφσκι και του Πρωθυπουργού Νίκολα Γκρουέφσκι.

ΝΙΚΟΣ ΜΠΕΛΛΟΣ - ΝΑΥΤΕΜΠΟΡΙΚΗ

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Thousands of Veles citizens received taxes receipts written in FYROMian, but with Greek letters. The receipts were printed and sealed in envelopes automatically. The state is investigating the case and some commentators are suspicious of…Greek agents (!).

How many of these ordered, fabricated events the brainwashed FYROMian public will see remains a question……

By Vasco

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Kiro Gligorov
In his column in daily “Dnevnik” professor Frckoski, a former Minister of Interior, revealed informations concerning the attempted assassination on the first Fyromian president Kiro Gligorov on 3 October 1995. The text woke up ghosts from the past and stirred political tension in FYROM In his regular Tuesday column in daily “Dnevnik” professor Ljubomir Frckoski, a former Minister of Interior and provoking opinion maker revealed information that left nobody in the country indifferent.

In the short text titled “Banality of Evil” professor Frckoski said he had been recently contacted by a person who shared with him new information concerning the attempted assassination on the first FYROMian president Kiro Gligorov on 3 October 1995.

The new “witness”, who is at present employed with a private company, worked for the so-called 7th directorate of the FYROMian secret services (DBK) at the time of the assassination, and he was directly involved in the events surrounding one of the most traumatic events in recent FYROMian history. He told Frckoski, who at the time served as Interior Minister, that he suspected people from inside DBK to have been involved in the attempt on the president’s life.

The column echoed like a bomb. Much like that bomb from 13 years ago.

President Gligorov was nearly killed on his way to work when a car-bomb went off as his vehicle passed by in the very centre of Skopje in autumn of 1995. Gligorov lost an eye and his survival was close to miraculous. His driver and bodyguard were both killed.

A photo taken a day before the assassination, allegedly by a German tourist, showed the white Ami 8, which contained the explosive, parked in front of hotel Bristol in the very centre of town. In the investigation which followed, DBK agents event went to Germany to look for the German citizen. He was never found. Now Frckoski’s witness, as reported by the professor, says he was the “tourist”.

“I am the one who took the photo showing the Ami 8 in front of the hotel the day before the assassination”, Frckoski quotes the testimony of the former agent, “ A DBK official ordered me to take it; we were taking dozens of photos each day. He did not tell me why. I gave him the photos and the negatives and forgot about it. But when the photo appeared in the press with the explanation it has been made by a German tourist, and they went to look for him in Germany, I was petrified. How will they find him in Germany when he is here? I wrote a note on this to the supervisors, but it later disappeared. It is not in the file on the assassination.”

Frckoski also writes the witness told him that the Ami 8 had been procured by a DBK official.

“Professor, those who gave me the instructions, I know them by name. I recognized the person who bought the Ami 8, from the photo-robot [of an alleged suspect, made by the police], he is a DBK official and a colleague of mine, who told himself off by saying he bought an Ami 8 for his cousin from Aleksinac [Serbia]. He said this in front of me. This is a special DBK action. It is known who orders it and without whose knowledge it can be ordered.”

Frckoski concludes is his column that “this explains why foreign secret services did not have information on the assassination”. That is to say, because it was “cooked” at home.

The accusation caused shock with the public and a furious response by the Ministry of Interior. Spokesman Ivo Kotevski said if Frckoski did not stop using such serious issues for his personal amusement, he would be called in for questioning.

With more calm, Public Prosecutor Ljupco Shvrgovski, stated the Prosecution would talk to Frckoski to assess the relevance of the new information. “At this point we don’t know what we will get. But if we get new relevant information we will certainly act on it”, said Shvrgovski.

The very next day Frckoski reported in the Prosecution where, according to the media, he shared the information he had and the name of the new witness. “This is all I can do”, he said briefly to the press, “to share what I know”.

By the next day, according to the media, the Prosecution also had a written statement by the witness, and planned to have him in for an interview next week.

The Minister of Interior, Gordana Jankulovska had a meeting with Prosecutor Shvrgovski to coordinate action. No one wanted to share more details.

“This is an open case for us. Whenever we have new information, regardless of where it comes from, we verify it automatically”, Jankulovska said.

In the 13 years since the assassination the investigation never really got anywhere. There were different leads which steered it in various directions, and different people were considered potential suspects in the past, but nothing tangible ever came from it.

Quite a few people who had been involved in the case in one way or another, as officials, possible witnesses, or suspects, died over the years. The list, according to the media, includes among other former Public Prosecutor Marko Bundalevski, former DBK director Dobri Velickovski, investigative judge Zdravko Vasilev. According to reporters who followed the case more closely, some of the people involved in the assassination died under unclear circumstances. A police stenographer, Tanja Pavloska, was found with a bullet in her head near the Ministry; the gun was never found. The three policemen who drove behind the president’s car on the day of the assassination are all dead too; one died in a car crash, the other was run over by a train; the third died of a heart attack which was reportedly a result of the post-traumatic stress.

Experts agree Frckoski is not an accidental choice of confessor for the witness. As a minister, he was in charge and directly responsible at the time of the assassination. Following the assassination Frckoski handed in his resignation but Prime Minister Branko Crvenkovski did not accept it.

Many say the whole thing is a political manipulation.

Former public prosecutor Stevan Pavleski says witnesses such as this are always problematic. “They always have some motive when they report something like this”. But in his view, if what the witness is saying proves to be true, then the old theses that the assassination was prepared abroad will finally become invalid.

Former interior minister Pavle Trajanov accused Frckoski of “making constructions with previously known facts”.

“He has got things mixed up. He was the minister back then and he made mistakes which made the assassination stay unresolved…now he is constructing things based on known facts. He should explain why he ordered to have the President’s mercedes lifted up and the crime scene cleansed half an hour after the explosion.”

Trajanov further accuses Frckoski of not having investigated the close ties between structures in Serbian and FYROMian military intelligence at the time. “He should also explain why he never investigated the theft of explosives and detonators of the same type used in the assassination, from Macedonian Army storage” continues Trajanov.

In Trajanov’s view a big chance to resolve the assassination was missed with the fact that FYROMian authorities did not ask cooperation with Serbian one’s during the operation “Sablja” following the assassination of Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic. That was in his view the most relevant direction for the investigation.

Former President Kiro Gligorov, who turned 90 last year, did not want to comment the new revelations.

Source: Observatoriobalcani.org
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Οι Σκοπιανοί που λέτε ίδρυσαν και την “Society of ancient Macedonians” στα Σκόπια. Το γέλιο είναι τα γραφεία τους στεγάζονται ακριβώς απο κάτω απο…την “Society of Bulgarians in the Republic of ‘Macedonia’” (sic)!!!!

Οι κακές γλώσσες λοιπόν λένε ότι και οι δυό “Societies“ αποτελούνται απο τα….ίδια άτομα. Κάτι σαν 09:00-15:00 το παίζουν ένδοξοι απόγονοι…αρχαίων Μακεδόνων και 15:00-20:00 ανεβαίνουν έναν όροφο και γίνονται…υπερήφανοι Βούλγαροι!!!! Ακολουθεί και η φώτο που γίνονται οι συνεστιάσεις των ενδόξων απογόνων του…Aleksandar Makedonski!!!

Y.Γ. Για τους τυχόν κακόβουλους…Όχι, οι απόγονοι των αρχ. Makedonski δεν πουλάνε συνολάκια!!! Το διπλανό μαγαζί είναι!

Η φώτο απο τον Vasko.

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Several medias today briefly flashed the news that “two assassination attempts against Nikola Gruevski were thwarted in last couple of months, one of them from criminal, the other from political motives“.The leading and primary proliferator of this alleged news is A1 TV.The info spread among many blogs and became heavily commented with almost unanimous conclusion that its a PR stunt by Gruevski.

Take note that viewers in Gruevski’s Feudal FYROMia are exposed to several daily sessions of budget-payed commercials about “remarkable” success stories of the Government in all walks of life which sharply contrast with escalating misery and predictions of economically tough winter. Also the assassination story doesn’t mention any arrests (!). [Note from HoM: Geez what are they feeding these people!!! Anyone wanna bet that they will imply soon the big bad Greeks were behind the so-called…assasination attempts????]

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Η πρόσφατη συνέντευξη του νέου Αμερικανού πρεσβευτή στα Σκόπια, Philip Reeker  στο Σκοπιανό A1 TV. Θυμίζουμε ο φιλοσκοπιανός Philip Reeker είχε ταχθεί απροκάλυπτα υπέρ της άμεσης ένταξης της FYROM στο ΝΑΤΟ χωρίς να ληφθεί υπόψην το ζήτημα της ονομασίας ενώ είχε…εξισώσει τις αλυτρωτικές διαθέσεις των Σκοπιανών με τις…Ελληνικές, έχοντας σαν συνέπεια να μπλοκαριστεί προσωρινά ο διορισμός του απο δύο γερουσιαστές. Χαρείτε τον!!

 

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In the land of absurbity where the official state quite hypocritically yells about “Human Rights” without ever looking at their own side of the yard, Dragi Karov was sentenced to pay 1000 Euro by a FYROM’s court for… waving the flag of a foreign country in March this year, during the inauguration of Todor Alexandrov’s monument in his private house in Veles. Anyone know whats the fine for waving the Greek flag???

http://blitz.bg/news/article/18798

By Nikolas M.

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