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5 Years of Independence
Human Rights in the Republic of Macedonia
1991- 1996
1. Introduction
Ljubco Georgievski, chairman of VMRO-DPMNE, the largest
opposition party in the Republic of Macedonia points out:
"The Macedonian people in its long history had only twice the
right of a free self-determination by a referendum: in 1991 when
we voted for an independent Macedonia and in 1871 when with a
decree the (Ottoman) sultan allowed an equally free referendum and
when the Macedonian people with a majority of over two thirds
accepted the Bulgarian Exarchy as their own."
2. Violations of Human Rights of Macedonian Citizens with a
Bulgarian Ethnic Consciousness 1990-1997
The case of Ilia Ilievski, leader of Party for Human Rights
The case of Georgi Kalauzarov
The Veles trial
The confiscation of Bulgarian books and newspapers
The non-registration of VMRO-Ohrid as Organization of Macedonian
Bulgarians
The case of Party for Human Rights
The case of Dimitar Delevski
The case of Vancho Veskov, leader of the United Macedonians Party
The repressions under members of VMRO-Tatkovinska Party
The campaign against intellectuals Dimitar Galev and Mladen
Srbinovski
The arrest of Marija Stoimenova and her husband
3. Infringement of Rights of Citizens of Other Countries in
Connection with the Issue of Macedonian Ethnical Character
The case of Nedka Ivanova
The repressions under Albanian citizens
The repressions under members of MPO
The case of Andon Spasov
4. Conclusion
The Macedonian independent magazine "Delo":"On the pages of the
newspapers, on the TV screens, every day we come across with the
condemnation of at least one fascist Bulgarophil enemy of
Macedonia.
1. Introduction
On September 8th, 1991 the citizens of the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia, in a referendum, expressed their desire for
independence. On December 19th, 1991 the Macedonian Parliament
passed a written declaration calling for international recognition
of the Republic of Macedonia.
Ljubco Georgievski, chairman of VMRO-DPMNE [1], the largest
opposition party in the Republic of Macedonia points out:
"The Macedonian people in its long history had only twice the
right of a free self-determination by a referendum: in 1991 when
we voted for an independent Macedonia and in 1871 when with a
decree the (Ottoman) sultan allowed an equally free referendum and
when the Macedonian people with a majority of over two thirds
accepted the Bulgarian Exarchy as their own."[2]
The referendum of 1991 was formulated deviously: Voters were asked
to declare whether there were for an Independent Macedonian
Republic which would have the right to enter into (a possible
future) Union of Sovereign Yugoslav States. According to the
recently adopted constitution [3] the:
"Republic of Macedonia is constituted as a national state of the
Macedonian people with established complete equality for its
citizens and permanent co-existence of the Macedonian people with
the Albanians, the Turks, the Vlahs, the Gypsies and other
nationalities living in the Republic of Macedonia" .
Apparently, the authors of the constitution did not regard the
Albanians, the Turks, the Vlahs et c. as parts of the 'Macedonian
people' whose national state the Republic of Macedonia was
supposed to be, but as only minorities who have the right to
co-exist with it.
To understand better the current situation in the Republic of
Macedonia, it is necessary to analyse the meaning given by the
authorities to the term 'Macedonian people' and the processes that
are developing among the main ethnic group - the descendants of
the people who by the first free referendum of 1871 seceded from
the (Greek) Patriarchy of Constantinopol and adopted the Bulgarian
Exarchy as their own national church.
The present Republic of Macedonia was established as an autonomous
state within the boundaries of Tito's Yugoslavia in 1944.
Communism was proclaimed to be the dominant social ideology while
the adopted national doctrine was supposedly derived from the
ideas of the left-wing fraction of the Macedonian liberation
movement (if the so-called VMRO(united) could be considered to be
a part of the Macedonian liberation movement). Nevertheless a
number of deviations even from the Macedonian left-wingers' party
line were made. For example, according to VMRO (united):
"the Macedonian people" consists of "all the nationalities that
used to live and still live there, and in behalf of whom we speak
of: Bulgarians, Albanians, Turks, Jews, Vlahs, Greeks,
Gypsies."[4]
If we compare the definitions given even by the most leftist
fraction from the early XX century and that of the Constitution of
the Republic of Macedonia we shall see that the political and the
geographical content of the meaning to the term 'Macedonian
people' was replaced with an invented ethnical one.
The concept of the Macedonians as an ethnic group, approved by the
Comintern in the 30s and adopted by the Yugoslav regime in
Macedonia after 1944 was NOT a home grown one! It was first
formulated by the 19th century Serbian politician Stojan Novakovic.
In a report to the Serbian Ministry of Education he wrote in 1887:
" Since the Bulgarian idea, as it is known to everyone has grown
deep roots in Macedonia I think that it is almost impossible for
us to shake the believe in it by opposing to it only the Serbian
idea...That is why the Serbian idea could use an ally, which could
be sharply opposed to the Bulgarianness and could contain the
elements that could attract the people and the peoples' sentiments
while deviating them away from the Bulgarianness." [5] Such a
policy he called Macedonism.
The Yugoslav authorities in Macedonia after 1944 spent much more
efforts to promote Macedonism as an anti-Bulgarian and a
pro-Serbian ethnical doctrine, than for the imposition of
communism as a social ideology. Unless we keep this fact in mind,
the nature of the processes going on at the moment among the
people in the Republic of Macedonia will remain obscure.
As in all emerging communist states the 'class enemies of the
people' were brutally persecuted, but in Macedonia the 'enemies of
the people' were invariably accused of being Bulgarophils,
Vanchovists' or 'Mihailovists' [6] and 'vrhovists'[7]
The policy of spreading Macedonism did not change in any
fundamental way after the proclamation of the Macedonian Republic
as an independent State in 1991. Some Orwellian practices continue
to be implemented. Presently in the Republic of Macedonia we can
find schools named: Miladinov Brothers, Rajko Zhinzifov, Kuzman
Shapkarev etc., while the students who study in them do not have
the access to the literary works of the patrons of their schools
in original, for the simple reason that those people not only
wrote in literary Bulgarian, but also participated in the
codification of the Bulgarian literary norm on the basis of
dialects spoken all over the Bulgarian lands, including of course
the Macedonian region.
The main political party in Macedonia that sought and brought
about the Republic's independence was VMRO- DPMNE (Democratic
Party for Macedonian National Unity). The drive for independence
was opposed by the former communists and by a group known as the
Union of Fighters from the War of Liberation (UFWL).
For example, on March 6, 1991, the structures of UFWL in Bitola,
Tetovo, Ressen and other areas, declared that the demands for
independence launched by VMRO-DPMNE were "in service of the plans
for assimilation made by the neighbouring States". At a 'protest'
meeting held in a pensioners hall in Kichevo, a declaration which
branded the statements of VMRO-DPMNE as "positions of Vanchovism
and Bulgarianism" was promulgated.
Nevertheless VMRO-DPMNE did not officially declared itself as an
ethnic Bulgarian organisation.
On August 11th, 1991, that party organised a memorial service in
Strumitsa for five students from that town who were killed in 1951
by the Communist regime. This students had declared that they were
ethnic Bulgarians (Liuben Topchev, the brother of Stefan Topchev,
one of the executed students, today is a political emigrant in USA
and as a member of the Macedonian Patriotic Organisation (MPO) is
active in supporting the Bulgarian ethnic consciousness in
Macedonia [8]). In the memorial service, however, the students
were presented as 'Macedonians'. Why this was so remains unclear,
and is not an object of our analysis.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Violations of Human Rights of Macedonian Citizens with a
Bulgarian Ethnic Consciousness 1990-1997
There were many manifestations of Bulgarian ethnical awareness in
Macedonia in the recent years, but those sentiments were brutally
persecuted.
On June 2nd, 1991, Mr.Ilia Ilievski, chairman of Human Rights
Party in Macedonia was arrested by the Yugoslav authorities at the
Bulgarian - Yugoslav border. His party was registered on December
14th, 1990 in accordance with decision No 23-4029/ 1-90.
Bulgarian literary language books and other Bulgarian materials
were confiscated from him. In the beginning of September, 1991, he
was deprived of his passport. In this way he was prevented from
taking part in the International Conference on Human Rights in
Moscow. According to a memorandum promulgated on September 12th,
1991
"The Party for Human Rights has gathered, relying only on its own
sources, information for over 23000 people killed or missing and
over 150 000 cruelly repressed, most of whom were people with
Bulgarian sympathies".
At the time of the referendum for independence, the Bulgarian
national television showed an agent of the secret service beating
up a Macedonian citizen merely because he had declared in an
interview that there was no difference between Bulgarians and
Macedonians.
On November 29th, 1991, the secretary of the Municipal Committee
of VMRO-DPMNE in the town of Veles, Georgi Kalauzarov, burned an
Yugoslav flag hanging from the terrace of an office building of
the Socialist Party of Macedonia. He declared that his act was "a
protest against the fact that Macedonian soldiers were decaying
for the interests of Great Serbia"[9]. Meanwhile, on December
19th, 1991, the Republic of Macedonia proclaimed its independence
and less than a month later, on January 15th, 1992, Bulgaria
became the first country in the world to recognise the new state.
The government of Macedonia officially began to regard the
Yugoslav army as an occupying force. Despite of all that, on June
12th, 1992, the so called Veles trial was set up against G.
Kalauzarov and eleven of his followers for the burning of the
Yugoslav flag.
In order to prepare the public opinion for the outcome of the
trial which was decided in advance, the defendants were branded as
Mihailovists and Bulgarophils[10]. In New Macedonia, a newspaper
close to the regime , in an anonymous article it was announced
that the defendants could not be Macedonians, since they possessed
Bulgarian and 'vrhovist' literature, found with them during their
detention[11]. G. Kalauzarov was deprived both of his identity
card and of his passport. One night the windows of his house were
broken with stones. He also received an anonymous threatening
letter with a warning that he would be punished because of his
struggle for the disintegration of the (already non-existent)
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The families of the
arrested were not informed for more than 10 days that the detained
had been taken to a prison in Skopje. During the preliminary
inquest the defendants suffered physical and mental torment. The
indictment was handed to them only few days before the beginning
of the trial. Although the trial was declared open to the public,
the Macedonian police did not allow several buses carrying members
of VMRO-DPMNE, who intended to offer moral support to the
defendants to arrive. In front of the court house hundreds of
citizens gathered, but none was admitted to the trial. During the
first recess, the two journalists from Bulgaria attending the
trial were evicted. At the trial the group was accused of being
Mihailovists and Bulgarophils. During the questioning the
prosecutor called the defendant Zhivko Petrushev from Tetovo, by
the family name Petrushevski. The defendant objected: "My name is
not Petrushevski, my name is Petrushev and I am a Macedonian
Bulgarian[12] ". (IIM has a taped record with the statements of
one of the defendants). One of the defendants, sent a letter to
the Bulgarian president Zhelio Zhelev, signed with the alias K.
Veleshki, (His name is known to IIM) where he stated:
"In Macedonia the cause of the Bulgarian ethnic awareness is not
lost. On the contrary - it is reviving again now, and we want this
revival to be felt by all of the Bulgarian people". [13]
The campaign against the defendants continued during the following
years. The only accusation was that the activity of the group:
"could have caused great bloodshed at the hands of the then
Yugoslav National Army, especially when the dangerous terrorist,
in the face of SFRY (Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia)
burned the Yugoslav flag on 29.11.1991". [14]
In fact this charge was made three years after the secession of
the Republic of Macedonia from Yugoslavia. The methods used in the
propaganda campaign were similar to the ones used by the frequent
anti-Bulgarian propaganda campaigns during Tito's times: "Krum
Chushkov (one of the defendants) as a student and as a disciple of
the occupying royalist Bulgaria, entered the 'Brannik'
organisation, in about 1945, with a group of intellectuals he was
under trial for allegedly preparing to commit acts of terrorism.
Later he became friends with Kalauzarov".[15] The devious
deviousness is evident from the fact that in 1945 the 'Brannik'
organisation was already disbanded, and so could not have been
active in Macedonia.
On June 22 Th., 1992, another defendant, Gotse Chushkov, made a
statement in front of Radio Free Europe's correspondence post in
Belgrade about "the most cruel methods of physical tortures,
beatings and maltreatment's", suffered by the detained during
investigations.
On October 20th, 1995, the trial in Veles was re-opened. The
defendants had to spend 43 months under investigation. The main
prosecutor in the trial was an ex-officer with 30 years of
experience in the Yugoslav secret services.
It is still a common practice of the Macedonian police to
confiscate all kinds books and other materials written in
Bulgarian literary language from Macedonian citizens.
According to protocol N 239-01/339 from December 28th, 1991, many
documents and photocopies in Bulgarian literary language were
taken from Slavtcho Cekovski.
What is ironic is that in the supposedly independent Republic of
Macedonia, these confiscations are carried on the grounds of
article 14 of the Yugoslav Law for Import and Dissemination of
Foreign Mass Media, passed in 1974 (see appendix No 1). In 1992,
Slavtcho Cekovski tried to establish an association of the
Bulgarians in Republic of Macedonia. He even managed to publish
one issue of a bulletin called "All- Macedonian Movement for the
Rights and Freedom of the Bulgarian Christians and Muslims in the
Republic of Macedonia". The authorities banned is activities.
According to protocol 71-01/91 from March 18th, 1992, many
Bulgarian literary language books, booklets and badges with the
image of Todor Alexandrov printed on them, were confiscated from
the Macedonian citizen Angelko Mitrev (see appendix No 2). On
November 16th, 1992, the police conducted a search of his home and
according to the protocol, found booklets with the image of Ivan
Mihailov, issues of the Bulgarian newspapers "Macedonia" and "Zora"
(Dawn), issues of "Macedonian Tribune", published in USA, and the
book "VMRO" (IMRO) - written by Ivan Mihailov, published in
Brussels, Belgium; all were taken from him. Specifically in the
police protocol was written: "REMINDER: all the magazines are
printed in Bulgarian" (see appendix No 3). As if using Bulgarian
is a horrendous crime! Of course by the term "Bulgarian" the
Macedonian police understands the Bulgarian literary norm, which
for the displeasure of the Skopje regime remains easily legible
and understandable even for Macedonians who come in touch with it
for a first time and who by no stretch of imagination could
honestly regarded it as a completely foreign language.
That is how the victim describes the reasons for the search:
"Few days earlier I met with some friends. We talked about
Macedonia. I took out one of the badges with the image of Todor
Alexandrov and told one boy: have it and wear on your chest the
image of Todor Alexandrov because he is the eagle of Macedonia.
These words were heard by a man who used to be an officer in the
Serbian Army. We began to argue. Later he went to the police
office and told them about me. So they cane home". [16]
Angelko Mitrev handed to the government of the Republic of
Macedonia a written objection, protesting the confiscation of his
materials. But according to decision 28/11- 409/ 1-92, his
complaint was rejected because: "As he admitted, he was going to
spread them among his friends" (see appendix No 4).
The Macedonian authorities have taken some measures in order to
prevent their citizens from visiting Bulgaria. For that reason on
April 26th, 1992, it was decided to charge with a fee of 30 DM
every Macedonian citizen who was leaving Macedonia for Bulgaria.
No such fee was asked from the Macedonian citizens who visited
other neighbouring countries.
All attempts of ethnic Bulgarian organisations to obtain legal
registration register continue to be brutally suppressed in the
Republic of Macedonia.
On June 7th, 1993, documents for the registration of organisation
called VMRO were launched in the branch of the Ministry of
Internal Affairs in Ohrid. According to article 1, of the proposed
party statute, the organisation was defined as a "democratic,
independent, national and political organisation of the Macedonian
Bulgarians". According to article 11 of its proposed statute: "VMRO
will strive to save the traditions and to revive Bulgarianness
(the Slavic traits of the Macedonian Bulgarians) in Macedonia".
A protocol describing the events of the constituent assembly that
took place on June 5th, 1993 was produced. From the conference
protocol it is evident Vladimir Paunkovski was elected as chairman
and that the constituents rejected the ethnic implications of the
term "Macedonian people". They declared:
"We consider that all the nationalities that inhabit Macedonia
have a consciousness that they belong together, so that all of
them share the common name "Macedonian people".
However, the authorities in Skopje refused to register the newly
created organisation. After a decision of the Supreme Court of
Macedonia in the same sense, the organisation self-disbanded, but
entrusted the members of the Central Committee (CC) to continue
with the attempts to obtain a registration.
The leader of VMRO, V. Paunkovski, has left Yugoslavia for
political reasons in June 1986 and settled in Switzerland.
Optimistic about the democratic processes going on in the Republic
of Macedonia, he returned in December 1991. In 1995, V. Paunkovski
became a chairman of a committee, which on August 2, intended to
conduct a commemorative service at the grave one of the voivodas
(leaders) of the historical VMRO - Toma Davidov in the Village of
Ozdoleni near Ohrid. For the occasion the committee printed
posters and sent invitations to sympathisers in the Republic of
Macedonia and abroad. Invitations were also sent to the
ambassadors of the USA, Germany and Russia, to the Macedonian
president Kiro Gligorov and to the Human Rights Office in Skopje.
Notice of the commemoration, along with copies of the posters,
were handed by the organisers to the office of the Ministry of
Internal Affairs in Ohrid on July 18, 1995. On July 25th, 1995,
two policemen went to V. Paunkovski's apartment and personally let
him know that the conducting of the commemoration was forbidden.
All the posters were seized. At the same time they refused to
present a written decision of that prohibition and a confirmation
that the materials had been confiscated.
On July 27th, 1995, Vladimir Paunkovski was called by the
telephone to come to the police office and was detained there from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. He was made to sign a declaration that he had
been informed about the prohibition of the commemoration service,
but he was not given a copy of it. He was told that every attempt
to visit the grave of Toma Davidov will trigger a ruthless
reaction of the police. Paunovski was beaten by the ethnic Serb
Atsa Chancharevich, an officer in the MIA in Skopje. Because of
all that, Paunkovski's Action Committee decided to commemorate the
event in a motel called 'Kotsare' near Ohrid. On August 2nd, Mr.
Paunovski was arrested in his apartment and detained by the police
at 8 p.m. and kept in the police until 9 p.m. He was told that
they had to hold an 'important conversation' with him but no
conversation took place. At the same time his lawyer Savo Kotsarev
from Skopje, inquired at the police office about Paunkovski but he
was told that they didn't know anything about him.
On the same day the Macedonian police prevented the Bulgarian
Member of Parliament Evgeniy Ekov (an co-chairman of VMRO-SMD)
from visiting Ozdoleni by car, in spite of his diplomatic
immunity. He was told that he might go there only alone and on
foot. At the same time his car had to be returned to Ohrid,
because as it was parked by the road it supposedly hindered the
traffic.
On October 25th, 1995, Mr. V. Paunkovski was arrested at the
Skopje Airport and his Macedonian passport was confiscated. He was
detained for 5 days and cruelly maltreated. All these steps were
taken to impede his visit to Austria, at the invitation of
professor Otto Kronsteiner from Salzburg University. There he was
to read a report about the Bulgarian character and on the
dialectical basis of the literary norm used in Skopje called
Macedonian language. While Mr. Paunkovski was detained, his
apartment was robbed. There were no signs that the door had been
forced (at that time Mr. Paunkovski's keys were held by the
police). Signs written in a non-standard Macedonian dialect with a
mixed Serbian Latin and Cyrillic script: "Bulgarians get out of
Macedonia", and "All Bulgarians that live here will die" appeared
on the wall. The losses from the theft and the stolen plane ticket
amounted to more than 10 000 DM.
On that occasion, on November 8th, 1995, professor Otto
Kronsteiner sent the following open letter to the president of the
Macedonian Academy of Science - Professor Bozhidar Vidoeski, to
the rector of Skopje University, and to the dean of the
Philological Department of the same University:
" We just learned that a Macedonian scholar, who did not refuse to
participate (in the Slavistic dabates in Salzburg university), was
detained by the authorities at the airport in Skopje, just before
his departure for Salzburg... If you consider it imperative by
such measures to save and inspire live into the Macedonian nation
and assert the Macedonian as a national language , then your
actions only confirm that in your Republic, there is a reign of
terror over the convictions of the citizens and that a suppression
over the open expressions of their opinions is exerted. This way,
your Republic and your Macedonian language will only become a
symbol of injustice. You counter the struggle for spiritual and
intellectual freedom, waged by scholars and students from other
countries with a meaningless old ideology, which you try to
preserve by pseudo-scientific means".
In order to turn the public opinion against Mr. Paunkovski, the
Macedonian authorities accused him of not paying alimony for his
daughter Natasha. According to decision No 9/96 of the City Court
in Ohrid, Paunkovski was imprisoned for 30 days. The execution of
the sentence began on March 4th, 1996. After he was released from
prison, a representative of the International Institute for
Macedonia met V. Paunkovski on April 5th, 1996. During a walk
along Ohrid's quay, around noon, the group met by chance with one
of Paunkovski's interrogators, who told him: "For one thing or
another you will be back in prison".
Because of those brutal repressions, Paunkovski presented his
grievances to the Minister of Internal Affairs at that time, L.
Frchkovski, and renounced his Macedonian citizenship. He declared:
"I, who by ethnical origin am a Macedonian Bulgarian, a citizen of
Republic of Macedonia, in a clear conscience voluntarily renounce
my Macedonian citizenship. The reason for my denouncement is the
violation of my human rights on the part of the country" (appendix
No 5).
In an interview to "Fokus" newspaper Mr. Paunkovski decleared:
"I accept the concept of a Macedonian nation but only in its
implication of statehood. According to us, Macedonia is a
territorial unit inhabited by ethnic Bulgarians, Serbs, Vlahs,
Albanians, Greeks, Turks and Gypsies, but with no ethnic
Macedonians. That is a category fabricated by the communists...I
confirm that everything that the official history or literature
promotes throughout the country is false and is a robbery of the
cultural and historical inheritance of Bulgaria... I guarantee
that in Ohrid alone there are from 10.000 to 15.000 people who
privately admit that they are Bulgarians and feel like Bulgarians,
but they are afraid of saying so in public".[17]
On December 21st, 1995, at 7.30 a.m., another member of VMRO-Ohrid
- Riste Manev, was arrested. He was taken away by a police car,
but the police denied any knowledge of the whereabouts of the
arrested man in front of his family. Furthermore, such repressive
acts were taken against Georgi Nastevski, Stavre Temelkovski,
Pipilevski and others, all members of VMRO-Ohrid.
On May 1st, 1996, V. Paunkovski addressed the Bulgarian president
Z. Zhelev with a request for a Bulgarian citizenship, since his
own Macedonian identity documents had been confiscated the
previous year and he could not leave the Republic of Macedonia. In
his request he emphasised that as a patriot, he would continue to
live in Ohrid. Mr. Paunkovski also requested to restore his
surname to Pankov - the surname used by his forfeitures before
they were forced to alter it to 'Paunkovski' after 1944.
On November 8th, V. Paunkovski was detained at the Ohrid airport
for a sixth time. The Macedonian police took away his new
Bulgarian passport, on the grounds that they "suspected that it
was forged."
During that period, the activity of other legally registered
organisations was also hindered. The chairman of the Party for
Human Rights, Ilia Ilievski, was not given a new passport so he
could not visit the Conference for human rights that took place in
Vienna, Austria. On that occasion, the party, in its own
memorandum No 180 from June 17th, 1993, while defending the rights
of the Bulgarian ethnic nationality, declared that notwithstanding
its new name, in power was still the old communist party. Because
of this action and the statements of its leader published in some
Bulgarian newspapers, the activities of the Party for Human Rights
in Macedonia ware forbidden at a session of the Regional Court in
Shtip on December 9th, 1993. As reasons the court stressed that:
"In fact, the chairman Ilia Ilievski, taking advantage of the name
of the party, often acts against the interests of the Macedonian
nation and country, renounces the existence of the Macedonian
nation and statehood and insists on the "Bulgarian" character of
the Macedonian Republic" (see appendix No 6).
It is significant that articles and statements of Mr. Ilievski
published in Bulgarian newspapers were presented as evidence
against his party. These materials used in court were not
rewritten to conform to the Macedonian written norm. This way the
Shtip court and after that the High Court of Macedonia admitted
that the literary Bulgarian was totally understandable to them.
[18]
After the attempted assassination of the Macedonian president K.
Gligorov on October 3th, 1995, a wave of arrests swept over the
Republic of Macedonia. Mainly persons showing interest in
Bulgaria, were prosecuted. Dragi Karev, one of the defendants of
the trial against the Veles Bulgarians (Veleshki Bugarashi) in
1992, was arrested by the police in Veles.
On January 18th, 1996, the Macedonian journalist Stefan Sharovski
was badly beaten by an army officer in Skopje. He adds to the
picture of the arbitrary misrule of the Skopje regime:
"In that context I would like also to mention Dimitar Delevski. He
was a journalist for the Bulgarian newspaper "Macedonia", an organ
of VMRO-SMD and irrespective of his deposition and positions of
the newspaper, the fact remains, that he was prevented from
corresponding from Macedonia. In Ohrid Delevski was beaten in a
similar way".[19]
The case of Dimitar Delevski and its repercussions is indicative
of the nature of the Macedonist regime in Skopje. In 1992.
Delevski addressed the Macedonian president with an open letter:
"This attack launched by the MVR (Ministry of Internal Affairs),
against my personality and my journalistic activities, will cease,
I hope". [20]
On December 11th, 1992, the Macedonian Patriotic Organisation
based in USA and Canada wrote a letter of support of Mr.
Delevski's activities, to the president K. Gligorov:
"It comes to our attention that the human rights of those who
consider themselves Bulgarians are often violated. This is true,
despite of the fact that Bulgaria is the only neighbouring country
showing an amicable attitude and which immediately recognised
Macedonia... We are disturbed about Dimitar Delevski, a Macedonian
correspondent for a newspaper published in Sofia, whom the police
has ordered not to write for the Bulgarian newspaper any more".
[21]
In spite of that interference, the circumstances of Delevski did
not improve. He asked for Bulgarian citizenship and such was
granted to him by a decree of the Bulgarian president Dr Z. Zhelev
in 1995.
According to protocol n. 71-01/127 from March 27th, 1993, two
calendars with inscriptions "100 years VMRO, with images of turn
of the century revolutionaries and cover of the statute of the
historical Bulgarian Macedono-Odrin Revolutionary Committee of
VMRO" printed on it, were confiscated from Delevski ( see appendix
No 7).
In Bulgaria, Delevski studied journalism and continued to publish
articles against the excesses of Macedonism. On November 13th,
1996 in the well in his own property, the corpse of Gerasim
Delevski, the father of D. Delevski, was found. A number of facts
indicate that he was first killed and then thrown there. The
medical authorities refused to make an autopsy or offer a medical
conclusion. Close friends of the Delevski family insist that the
murder of Delevski was intended to frighten his son.
The repressions over Mr. Vancho Veskov, leader of the United
Macedonians Party were closely connected with his friendship with
Delevski In the summer of 1992 Veskov gave an interview to
Delevski, which due to the difficulties in passing the information
to Bulgaria, was published at last on November 20th. Says Veskov:
"The biggest mistake at the moment is that the help of the
Macedonians from all over the world and especially of those from
Bulgaria, whose consciousness is Bulgarian has been eliminated, I
think that in the Republic of Macedonia a discrimination is
practised against those people due to their Bulgarian identity.
Even the people who feel themselves Bulgarian in Vardar Macedonia
are persecuted. The Republic of Macedonia has to respect the
rights of those Bulgarians living on its territory".[22]
Right after that interview the police began to terrorise Vancho
Veskov. On September 15th, 1992, his two-year-old son was killed
with a hunting gun in front of his house. The father declared that
he was anticipating such an incident to happen to him. The police
did not find the killer and the attacks on Veskov continued. He
was forced to leave Macedonia and now he lives in Australia.
Beside the cases with Delevski and Veskov, some other death cases
happened in Macedonia, for which it is supposed that pro-Serbian
circles of the police, have something to do with. These are the
murders of Minister of Internal Affairs Jordan Mijalkov, the
officer of MVR Mile Milevski, the leader of VMRO-DPMNE in Kumanovo
Mile Ilievski and the journalist from the editorial office of "Glas",
organ of VMRO-DPMNE, Ljupcho Atanasovski[23].
On March 8th, 1995 the chairman of VMRO-Tatkovinska Party (VMRO-Motherland
Party) - Dr Dimitar Tsarnomarov was arrested for more than three
days and nights in Bitola. After a search, all the documents of
his party, literature in Bulgarian literary language have been
confiscated. The police refused to give any information to his
wife Marina, as to the reasons for his detention and about his
physical condition. During the detention he was interrogated again
and again about his contacts with some Bulgarian social circles.
He was beaten with a butt-stock of an automatic gun over his head
and as a result of that his eyesight was non durably injured. In
the press close to the regime Dr. Tsrnomarov was continually
accused of being a "Bulgarophil" . As a result of all the
harassment, on January 3th, 1996, Dr. Tsrnomarov suffered a heart
attack.
On October 18th, 1995, Dr Tsrnomarov and the active members of
VMRO-Motherland Party - Hristo Petsev and Grigor Tsurev were
detained in the prison of Strumitsa.
On March 6th, 1996, the 25 years old Trajan Godev - a member of
-the VMRO-Motherland Party, was also detained for examination. On
the same day, he was taken home, under police escort, where
literature in Bulgarian literary language was confiscated. Godev
complained to his close friends that he had suffered cruel mental
torment while in custody.
On the following day, the 30 years old Tihomir Jajnaliev and the
36 years old Dimitar Nicolov were arrested in Strumitsa. The
latter was also sacked from his work, all because of his Bulgarian
consciousness. The independent Macedonian press described the
occasion
"In a classic Stalinist style they were put to mental maltreatment
for many hours (from 6 o'clock am, to 2 o'clock p.m.) by the
police, while being injured and threatened. However, apart from
treating them as enemies of the state, they all were threatened
with regard to their rights of free travel, religion and political
determination"[24]
On November 6th, 1996, the Macedonian citizens Liljana Stoimenova
and Traian Godev were called to the police office for an
"informative conversation" and were detained for more than 10
hours. They were interrogated about their contacts with Bulgarian
citizens and organisations, and at the same time they were
maltreated.
A number of Macedonian intellectuals were put to particularly
humiliating harassment. On March 1st, 1996 Professor Dimitar Galev
was arrested. He is an author of a number of books containing
unfalsified historical documents about Macedonia. Two of them : "Beliot
teror vo Jugoistochna Makedonija" (The white Terror in south-east
Macedonia)" (Shtip 1991) and "Todor Aleksandrov - od avtonomija do
samostojna drzhava" (Todor Alexandrov - from an autonomy to an
Independent State)" (Skopje 1996) were really outstanding. He is
also a chairman of the Agrarian Party and of the unregistered for
almost two years Movement for Friendship and Co-operation between
the Republic of Macedonia and the Republic of Bulgaria. On that
occasion he addressed the Macedonian public, whit an open letter
containing the following:
"I was called to the police for an official conversation, which
according to me, was an examination of the loyalty for the
Macedonian cause, and by the way I was asked about the book about
Todor Alexandrov, about the memorandums addressed to the European
Union and to the Organisation of the United Nations in 1992 and
1993, about my stay in America for the congress of MPO (Macedonian
Patriotic Organisation) in 1993, about my conversation with the
secretary of the Russian embassy in Sofia, about my participation
in the session of a forum in R.of Bulgaria in 1993, where the
topic "Macedonia today and tomorrow" was discussed."[25]
In a panoramic interview, professor Galev, in an very discreet
way, expressed his views on the language spoken in the Republic of
Macedonia:
"It is true that at the congress (of the Macedonian Patriotic
Organisation in USA and Canada) they were speaking in English and
in Bulgarian. But we, who were from Macedonia excused ourselves
and said: let us speak the language that our mothers speak,
because we understand Bulgarian but we can not speak literary
Bulgarian".[26]
As a result of his activities, professor Galev was fired.
Another intellectual, who was put to an enormous mental
harassment, was the Macedonian writer Mladen Srbinovski. The
reason for the campaign against him were his brave articles in
which he openly maintained the idea of the Bulgarian ethnical
nature of the Macedonian people. The following are some examples
of the qualifications of him written in a single article in a
supposedly respectful newspaper:
"On Bulgarian payroll; an alienated Macedonian; Srbinovski (read
Bugarinovski); incurable patological case and an oathbraker;
proved to be paid by the Bulgarians and callous fighter the for
spread of Bulgarian vrhovist ideas; vrhovist of a high rank in his
native country; callous Bulgaromaniac; Srbinovski the Macedonophob;
one of the most reliable Bulgarians; mad Bulgarian dog;...his
occupator-like macedonophobia and distorted spirituality..."[27]
This quotations are indicative of the atmosphere in which the
Macedonian intellectuals have to work.
A very interesting case was the arrest on October 6th, 1995 of the
Skopje resident Marija Stoimenova and her husband Georgi Stoimenov.
She had the courage to describe the methods of maltreatment used
by the Macedonian police (appendix No 8). The reason for her
arrest was that she was a relative of Alekso Stoimenov from
Strumitsa who at present is a political emigrant in Belgium and a
chairman of MPO "Todor Alexandrov" there. At the time of her
arrest she needed to go to the toilet. M. Stoimenova describes the
behaviour of the police officers in the following way:
"We stopped and I went to the WC. At the same time a woman went in
together with me and stood there next to me while I was performing
my most intimate and natural functions. At that very moment I
began to ask myself if I was a human being and if I had any human
rights.
The interrogation went on:
They began making threats. They wanted me to tell them about the
first arrival of Alekso Stoimenov; to remember when did he cone?
Who did he come with? Why? Through which border did he come? With
whom did he meet? What did he talk about? How long did he stay in
Macedonia? Whom had he phoned? What were his ideas? What was the
aim of his presence in Macedonia? Why did he come here? Whereabout
did he go in Macedonia? And if I didn't tell all that, and all my
life during the last 3- 4 years for each day and if I didn't
confess that I have carried out the attempted assassination
against Kiro Gligorov, I was going to be finished. They were going
to change my outlook and I would stay in prison for about 20
years.
Than a conversation began like this:
Come on, tell us when did Alekso Stoimenov come to Skopje for the
first time and whom did he meet with? And what did he talk about?
What places do I visit? Where do I work? How many times I have
been to Bulgaria? What have I brought from Bulgaria and what has
Alekso asked me to bring to Skopje"
Than one of the inspectors told me: "if you don't want to confess
that you have carried out the attempted assassination against Kiro
Gligorov, in a gentle way, we can try a ruder one. We don't have
the nerves to wait for you". He went out and five minutes later he
came back with a stick. Firstly he began to boast and to hit the
wall and the desk with the sick, crying to me "Do you see what
will happen to you?" Then he began to push me to the wall and to
beat me against it. He was saying: "you are very strong, stronger
than the wall. Let me see if you are stronger than the stick ..."
All that happened to me, the way I was maltreated and humiliated,
happened also to my husband with the only difference that he was
also mercilessly beaten. On the sixth day I collapsed, being
entirely exhausted of hunger and sleeplessness".
After she was released from the police office, her problems did
not finish:
"We called for an ambulance by the phone and when we said who is
phoning they answered: we cannot come; go to the nearest hospital,
we can not send you an ambulance. We went throughout Skopje to get
a doctor's certificate for our injuries but none of the doctors
wanted to give us a certificate saying: We do not dare. They will
imprison us too".
In the summer of 1996, dozens of Macedonian citizens, who were
students in Bulgaria, were called to the police office for an
informal conversation. They had been asked if they knew particular
persons from VMRO-SMD. If they denied such acquaintances, the
inspectors would show them photos of meetings of VMRO-SMD. The
students were put under the pressure to drop their studies in
Bulgaria.
In the physical repressions against people with preserved
Bulgarian ethnical consciousness, the following officers from the
State Security Service have taken part: Itse Damtchevski and Igor
Galovski from Bitola; Alexander Tsancharevich from Skopje; Stefan
Buzovski from Ohrid. No one has ever held them accountable for
their actions.
2. Infringement of Rights of Citizens of Other Countries in
Connection with the Issue of Macedonian Ethnical Character
In its struggle against the Bulgarian consciousness, the
Macedonian authorities often encroach upon Citizens of other
countries.
On January 21st, 1991, in Skopje, the Bulgarian citizen Nedka D.
Ivanova was arrested, only because she announced that ethnical
Macedonian Nation did not exist and in fact the Macedonians were
ethnic Bulgarians. At the moment of her arrest she was physically
maltreated by the Security authorities.
From August 18th, to 22nd, 1992, two Albanian citizens of
Bulgarian origin (their names are well known to IIM) visited
VMRO-SMD. When they were passing over the Albano- Macedonian
border at Kafasan, they told the Macedonian authorities that they
were ethnic Bulgarians. The authorities charged them with an
unusually big fee 110 DM for the car and 25 DM for each of them
for a transit visa valid for 5 days. Usually transit visas are
issued for one month. The aim was to prevent the visit of the two
Albanians to Bulgaria. The sum of 160 DM was equal to one year
payment at that time in Albania.
According to protocol No 1 from January 26th, 1996, an album
called "Kiustendil and the Liberating Fights in Macedonia" had
been confiscated from Andrea Shtika, an Albanian citizen of a
Bulgarian origin (See appendix No 9).
According to the Macedonian authorities, the Slav minority of
Albania consisted only of ethnical Macedonians and not Bulgarians.
Each attempt for a declaration of a Bulgarian ethnic consciousness
in Albania is pursued in a very brutal way by the authorities in
the Republic of Macedonia. Very indicative is the following
article in the independent Albanian newspaper "Koha Jone" for
destruction of Albanian passports by the Macedonian frontier
authorities:
"The rage of Macedonia perhaps was caused by the reporting of the
Bulgarian National Television, made with the participation of the
residents of 10 villages with Macedonian national minority in the
region of Likenas. The citizens of this zone declared in front of
the cameras of the Bulgarian Television that they should not be
called Macedonian, but Bulgarian national minority. Among those,
who took part in the interview was the ex- headmaster of the Town
Hall in Likenas, George Kaslari, who said that the population
calls itself Bulgarian and asked for the help of the Bulgarian
state for it to acquire a status of a minority. The sharp
reactions of Skopje about the national minority in Likenas became
stronger after the reporting was shown by the 1st channel of the
State Macedonian TV... The Macedonian national minority is a
victim of this position. One of its representatives declared in
front of "Koha Jon": Now we have got a lot of problems with the
(Macedonian) Custom Office and we were told that as long as we
call ourselves Bulgarians, we should take visas from the Bulgarian
Embassy. The Macedonian authorities made invalid the visas of
those who have been caught in various cities in Macedonia and took
them back to the border". [28].
The Macedonian police encroached on the rights of the political
emigrant of long standing in Belgium - Alekso Stoimenov. From the
protocol No 3 from May 17th, 1996, it shows that his Belgian
passport was temporarily taken in (see appendix No 10).
The authorities meet with hostility the Macedonian emigrant from
Bitola Metodi Dimov, and many times have worn him to leave the
Macedonian Republic. M. Dimov living also in Belgium, together
with A. Stoimenov published a number of books about the Macedonian
Liberation Movement in Bulgarian literary language. M. Dimov is an
ex-speaker in the broadcasts of Radio Madrid, intended for
Macedonia.
The Macedonian Secret Services show a particular interest in the
activity of emigrant organisations such: VMRO- SMD in Bulgaria,
MPO in USA and Canada, the editorial office of "Macedono-Bulgarian
Review "Vardar" in Toronto, Canada and others that stand up for
Bulgarian ethnical positions. A person, wished to be anonymous but
By:
http://members.tripod.com/~HR_Macedonia/hr_en.htm
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