Political Scandals and Judiciary Corruption in Macedonia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Niko777
    Senior Member
    • Oct 2010
    • 1895

    #61
    I don't support any of the political parties in Macedonia, but I find it disgusting and am amazed how many media outlets are still spreading cheap pro-Gruevski propaganda. Look at today's article by MINA:



    "Roughly 50 people showed up at the rally in Ohrid."

    Does this look like 50 people to you?





    Comment

    • ramo
      Member
      • Dec 2011
      • 117

      #62
      Conversations published yesterday.

      Prime minister and one of the ministers in the government are talking about organizing protests , how the protests should be held in the Center muncipality. Gruevski asks group of people to enter the building and one of the "protesters" to slap the mayor of Center municipality few times in front of cameras.



      the audio recording is on soundcloud on the link.

      Comment

      • vicsinad
        Senior Member
        • May 2011
        • 2337

        #63
        Originally posted by Niko777 View Post
        I don't support any of the political parties in Macedonia, but I find it disgusting and am amazed how many media outlets are still spreading cheap pro-Gruevski propaganda. Look at today's article by MINA:



        "Roughly 50 people showed up at the rally in Ohrid."

        Does this look like 50 people to you?





        I've never liked MINA. It's mostly opinion, anyway.

        Though, while it looks like several hundred people, the number of Mak flags or symbols is maybe 1? I'm not saying that flag wavers and chest beaters are what make a good rally, or that you can't have a legitimate rally without them. Just an observation.

        Comment

        • Niko777
          Senior Member
          • Oct 2010
          • 1895

          #64
          Originally posted by vicsinad View Post
          I've never liked MINA. It's mostly opinion, anyway.

          Though, while it looks like several hundred people, the number of Mak flags or symbols is maybe 1? I'm not saying that flag wavers and chest beaters are what make a good rally, or that you can't have a legitimate rally without them. Just an observation.
          Good observation. But then again, those who always wave flags and those who presented themselves as patriots turned out to be the biggest traitors out of everyone. Tough times in Macedonia these days, no one is worthy of our trust.

          Comment

          • VMRO
            Senior Member
            • Sep 2008
            • 1462

            #65
            Originally posted by Niko777 View Post
            Good observation. But then again, those who always wave flags and those who presented themselves as patriots turned out to be the biggest traitors out of everyone. Tough times in Macedonia these days, no one is worthy of our trust.
            I agree Niko, it looks like nobody is worthy of our trust in this day and age.

            Technology has come a long way and politicians need to understand with social media today, negative publicity can either make or break you.
            Verata vo Mislite, VMRO vo dushata, Makedonia vo Srceto.

            Vnatreshna Makedonska Revolucionerna Organizacija.

            Comment

            • VMRO
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2008
              • 1462

              #66
              Wire-tap scandal threatens stability, democracy in Macedonia



              Opposition leader Zoran Zaev (C) is seen on a mobile phone screen during a news conference in Skopje


              Macedonian magazine editor Mladen Cadikovski received his "file" in a binder -- page after page of transcribed telephone calls with colleagues and friends, leaked to him by the country's opposition leader who is publishing scores of such wire-taps.

              Cadikovski's Focus magazine is fiercely critical of Macedonia's conservative government and he was not surprised that authorities might be tapping his calls.

              "(But) it's a different feeling when you open the folder and see at least a dozen real conversations, that your life is sitting wide open in the palm of someone's hand," he said.

              Fourteen years since NATO pulled Macedonia from the brink of civil war, the ex-Yugoslav republic once hailed as a success-story of Western intervention is embroiled in a scandal that critics say has exposed its democracy as hollow and could potentially reopen a dangerous ethnic divide.

              For three months opposition Social Democrat leader Zoran Zaev has been publishing the wire-taps he says he received from a whistleblower. He says they were gathered illegally and on an industrial scale by Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski's government.

              Voices purported to be those of Gruevski, senior officials, journalists and judges have been aired at press conferences. The tapes appear to expose ministers and security officials discussing how to employ rank-and-file party members in state jobs, pick judges and massage elections.

              Gruevski has dismissed the wire-taps as the work of foreign spies and the authorities have charged Zaev, who has no immunity from prosecution, with trying to topple the government.

              The European Union, which Macedonia hopes to join, expressed "grave concern" on Tuesday over what it said was deterioration in the rule of law, fundamental rights and freedom of media.
              Related Coverage

              › Media critic of Macedonian government receives funeral wreath

              "If the recordings are true, and much suggests that they are, Macedonia cannot be described as a democracy," said Florian Bieber, an expert on the region based at the University of Graz.

              Gruevski was not available to speak to Reuters but a senior ally, deputy parliament speaker and former foreign minister Antonio Milososki, accused Zaev of "playing a risky game".

              "It does not fit someone who is trying to promote himself to be a prime minister of a country, to play the role of Julian Assange or Edward Snowden," he told Reuters, referring to well-known leakers of classified information in the West.

              ETHNIC TENSIONS

              Faced with the prospect of a lengthy jail sentence, Zaev has now threatened to publish tapes he says expose government machinations against Macedonia's ethnic Albanian minority if Gruevski does not agree to hold new, fair elections.

              With Macedonia's EU and NATO aspirations in limbo due to a long-running row with Greece, the West's leverage in brokering a solution to the crisis is limited. But the stakes are high.

              In 2001, amid clashes between government security forces and ethnic Albanian guerrillas, NATO brokered a peace deal that offered greater rights for the 30-percent Albanian minority and Macedonia was promised a path to membership of NATO and the EU.

              But progress has been blocked by the dispute with Greece over Macedonia's name, which it shares with a northern Greek province. Meanwhile, Gruevski has shifted right, burnishing Macedonians' sense of national identity with a gaudy, neo-classical facelift of the capital and, critics say, backsliding on democratic freedoms, particularly independent media.

              Frustration over the lack of progress towards the European mainstream is again fueling ethnic tensions. Diplomats fear both sides in the surveillance scandal may try to exploit the threat of inter-ethnic violence.

              Zaev says he has wire-taps concerning a notorious murder case from 2012, when five Macedonian men were shot dead at a lake near Skopje. Police blamed "radical Islamists" and five ethnic Albanians were convicted. The case triggered Albanian protests and some remain suspicious about the official version.

              "Everyone will know the truth," Zaev told Reuters.

              Bieber said a bigger risk lay in Gruevski's VMRO-DPMNE trying to stir up ethnic tensions in order to shore up its own support base and distract attention from the wire-taps.

              On Tuesday, police said 40 armed men speaking Albanian had briefly seized a police post near Macedonia's northern border with Kosovo, in what authorities described as a "terrorist act". The men disappeared without a trace.
              Verata vo Mislite, VMRO vo dushata, Makedonia vo Srceto.

              Vnatreshna Makedonska Revolucionerna Organizacija.

              Comment

              • VMRO
                Senior Member
                • Sep 2008
                • 1462

                #67
                Journalist Critical Of Macedonian Government Receives Chilling Death Threat


                By Kole Casule
                Journalists in Macedonia protested on Wednesday after a prominent news anchor received a death threat in the form of a funeral wreath, against a backdrop of deepening political crisis in the ex-Yugoslav republic.

                The wreath was received by the wife of Borjan Jovanovski, a journalist with the Macedonian Internet portal Nova TV and a well-known critic of the conservative government of Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski, at their home in Skopje on Tuesday.

                It read "Final Regards" and the unidentified man who delivered it named the sender as Todor Aleksandrov, an apparent reference to a controversial member of the VMRO nationalist movement against Ottoman Turkish rule in the region in the early 20th century.

                The threat comes at a time when Gruevski's ruling VMRO-DPMNE party - which claims roots in the VMRO movement - is facing accusations of illegal surveillance and abuse of power.

                The government, opposition and Macedonia's journalism association condemned the death threat. Dozens of journalists gathered in front of the government building, where they left their own wreath in symbolic protest.

                "Of all the threats that Borjan received, that I and other critical colleagues have received, this threat has shaken us the most," said his sister Svetlana, also a journalist.

                The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), a human rights watchdog, said the wreath sent to Jovanovski amounted to "yet another message that critical voices are to be silenced."

                On Tuesday the European Union expressed "grave concern" over what it said was deterioration in the rule of law, fundamental rights and freedom of media in Macedonia, a candidate for membership of the bloc.

                Since January, opposition leader Zoran Zaev has been publishing wire-taps he says were conducted by the government and which critics say provide evidence of extensive state control over the media, judges and the conduct of elections.

                The EU and the United States have urged authorities to investigate the content of the tapes, but police have instead charged Zaev with trying to topple the government. Gruevski says the wire-taps were the work of a foreign spy service and has dismissed his critics' accusations of widespread abuse of power.

                On Wednesday, Zaev released new tapes in which voices purported to be those of senior government officials are heard discussing hiring journalists at the state broadcaster and agreeing editorial policy with the owners and editors of two private television stations.

                Reporters Without Borders ranks Macedonia 117th out of 180 countries on its World Press Freedom Index, down from 45th in 2006 when Gruevski came to power. (Writing by Matt Robinson; Editing by Gareth Jones)
                Verata vo Mislite, VMRO vo dushata, Makedonia vo Srceto.

                Vnatreshna Makedonska Revolucionerna Organizacija.

                Comment

                • VMRO
                  Senior Member
                  • Sep 2008
                  • 1462

                  #68
                  New Tapes Reveal Macedonia Govt's Grip on Media

                  The ruling party has been carefully selecting journalists for work in the public broadcaster while controlling the private media through ties to their owners, the opposition said on Wednesday, revealing its latest wiretapped conversations.
                  Sinisa Jakov Marusic
                  BIRN
                  Skopje


                  At the opposition's 24th press conference on the subject of government wiretapping, the Social Democrats presented new tapes that they say reveal the ruling party's tight grip on the media.

                  The content of the latest tapes explain why the national broatcaster, Macedonian Radio and Television, MRTV "has been turned into an electoral headquarters of the ruling [VMRO DPMNE] party," Social Democrat leader Zoran Zaev told a press conference.

                  Several conversations between what appears to be the voice of Interior Minister Gordana Jankuloska feature her telling Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski that she has a notebook full of names of eligible and ineligible journalists for hire.

                  The Prime Minister asks her to check out several names that are about to be sent off as foreign correspondents.

                  On a previous occasion, the opposition presented a tape in which Jankuloska's voice could be heard speaking about a similar notebook containing the names of reliable judges.

                  In another new tape, between Jankuloska and what appears to be the Prime Minister's chef-de-cabinet, Martin Protugjer, the two cannot decide whether to continue employing people in MRTV who are recommended by the ruling party's local branches but who seem incapable of journalistic work. Another option they mull is to employ professionals who are close to them. The adopted conclusion is to proceed along both paths.

                  One conversation appears to feature Gruevski telling Transport Minister Mile Janakieski that they should take over Radio Gostivar, a local broadcaster. "Let one of ours apply and take over [the station]", Gruevski says.

                  Several other conversations appear to feature Protugjer calling Emil Stojmenov, owner of the private Kanal 5 TV,one of the most prominent TV stations in Macedonia, instructing him not to publish certain news items and interviews that are not favourable to the ruling party. Stojmenov willingly complies.

                  In another tape, Protugjer calls Stojmenov to tell him that the TV's main headline story should be about oil smuggling, as he aims to use against the opposition.

                  Another tape reveals what seems to be a conversation between Protugjer and Janakieski in which Protugjer instructs Janakieski that a pro-government newspaper, Republika, must be procured and distributed to public institutions "to the maximum".

                  One other tape involves the alleged voice of secret police chief Saso Mijalkov telling Dragan Pavlovic, the chief editor at Sitel TV, another prominent pro-government outlet, that he plans to give him exclusive video footage of an apprehended person. He describes in detail where and when the person will be nabbed by the police, so that the TV cameras can capture the event for the cameras.

                  The opposition played other tapes that they say highlight the clientelistic relationship between mainstream media owners and government.

                  In one tape, what seems to be the owner of Sitel TV, Goran Ivanov, asks Transport Minister Janakieski to grant him a permit for a higher than originally predicted building in Skopje.

                  It was intended for the headquarters of a small government party, the Socialist Party, led for decades by his father, Ljubisav Ivanov.

                  Janakieski agrees to the request but says that local residents near the construction site have already complained about the plans. "F***k them!" the voice of Ivanov is heard responding.

                  In another case, the owner of Kanal 5, Stojmenov, appears to ask Protugjer to ensure the State Revenue Office, UJP, turns a blind eye to unpaid taxes by the TV.

                  Protugjer pledges to "find a way to fix that matter" and later tells Stojmenov that the Prime Minister has personally intervened, by summoning the chief of the UJP.

                  In another tape, the opposition says Sitel TV editor Dragan Pavlovic can be heard asking for, and getting, advice from UJP chief Goran Trajkovski on how to re-program the debts of one of his firms, Total, so that he can later close it.

                  In another case, the opposition said Pavlovic's voice can be heard boasting about how he had found a job for his wife with a good salary in just five minutes, thanks to his good relations with the Prime Minister.

                  The new tapes reveal the "vulgar occupation and criminal coalition of Gruevski with the public broadcaster and the private media outlets", Zaev told the press conference, demanding that the above-mentioned media outlets allow him air time to confront them with the evidence that he possesses.

                  The opposition started releasing its tapes of government officials' conversations in February. It claims that Gruevski has orchestrated the illegal surveillance of some 20,000 people and that the material comes from sources in the Macedonian secret services.

                  Gruevski has insisted that the tapes were created by unnamed "foreign secret services" in collaboration with the opposition in order to destabilise the country.
                  Verata vo Mislite, VMRO vo dushata, Makedonia vo Srceto.

                  Vnatreshna Makedonska Revolucionerna Organizacija.

                  Comment

                  • makedonche
                    Senior Member
                    • Oct 2008
                    • 3242

                    #69
                    What are they complaining about, they got nice flowers! I like the Alexandrov card too!
                    On Delchev's sarcophagus you can read the following inscription: "We swear the future generations to bury these sacred bones in the capital of Independent Macedonia. August 1923 Illinden"

                    Comment

                    • VMRO
                      Senior Member
                      • Sep 2008
                      • 1462

                      #70
                      German Diplomat Urges Resignations in Macedonia

                      Code:
                      http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/germany-suggests-resignations-in-macedonia-wiretap-scandal
                      German ambassador to Macedonia says top-level resignations may be needed to ensure a credible investigation into opposition claims of government corruption.


                      German Ambassador to Macedonia, Christine Althauser | Photo by: diplo.de

                      Germany's ambassador to Macedonia, Christine Althauser, told a round table in Skopje on EU integration that Macedonian officials may have to resign to ensure a credible investigation into opposition claims that the government has abused its powers.

                      "Political consequences of this scope... are unavoidable", Althauser said on Monday. "Political consequences mean, for instance, resignations as a precondition to get the necessary transparent and impartial investigation started."

                      Last week, the US ambassador to Macedonia, Jess Baily, called on Macedonia to probe claims that the government had misused its powers and - if need be - remove those who were hampering the credibility of the process.

                      The German ambassador said Macedonia's failure to start treating opposition allegations seriously was irritating Western ambassadors.

                      "Our Western belief that... the interests of the state should prevail over party politics seems to be naive in regards to the political culture here, to say the least," Althauser remarked.

                      Althauser told the round table that it was "tragic" to see that all of the country's shortcomings listed in the annual reports of the European Commission on Macedonia - over the rule of law, judicial and media independence and over elections - confirmed by the contents of the tapes of official conversations released by the opposition.

                      "Over-employment in state institutions, often staffed with party followers rather than competent administrators, unequal treatment of individuals and certain institutions before the courts... political interference in the media, in particular in the public broadcaster, have... made each Macedonian citizen and taxpayer a victim of the clientelistic and partisan behavior of state institutions," the ambassador said.

                      Macedonia's opposition Social Democrats under Zoran Zaev started releasing secretly recorded tapes of officials' conversations in February. It claims they show Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski orchestrated the illegal surveillance of some 20,000 people, adding that the material comes from sources in the Macedonian secret services.

                      Gruevski has insisted that the tapes were created by unnamed "foreign secret services" in collaboration with the opposition in order to destabilise the country.

                      The European Parliament has launched talks between the opposition and the government to help overcome the political crisis in the country, but the talks have far to yield any results.
                      Verata vo Mislite, VMRO vo dushata, Makedonia vo Srceto.

                      Vnatreshna Makedonska Revolucionerna Organizacija.

                      Comment

                      • sydney
                        Member
                        • Sep 2008
                        • 390

                        #71
                        It's sound to ask for resignations from political figures in the wake of this affair, and it's also sound to ask where the recordings have come from. As the ambassador says, it's all about transparency.

                        Comment

                        • makedonche
                          Senior Member
                          • Oct 2008
                          • 3242

                          #72
                          Macedonia doesn't need any external opinions on how to run the country or who should resign or any other useless opinions, if these imbeciles didn't have the guts to stand up and comment on the international stage that Macedonia is entitled to self determination, what the fuck are they sticking their noses in for now?
                          On Delchev's sarcophagus you can read the following inscription: "We swear the future generations to bury these sacred bones in the capital of Independent Macedonia. August 1923 Illinden"

                          Comment

                          • Volokin
                            Member
                            • Apr 2014
                            • 278

                            #73
                            Macedonia Indicts Opposition Leader Who Denounced Graft

                            WARSAW — Macedonia’s main opposition leader has been formally indicted on charges of wiretapping and antigovernment activities after months of political turmoil, prosecutors said this week.

                            The leader of the left-wing Social Democratic Union of Macedonia, Zoran Zaev, was charged with “one continuous criminal act of unauthorized wiretapping and audio recording” as well as “violence against representatives of the highest authorities,” according to a statement posted on the state prosecutor’s website late Thursday.

                            The indictment came shortly after Mr. Zaev unveiled plans for a mass protest in the capital of the landlocked Balkan nation, Skopje, to be held this month — “the biggest one that the country has seen,” he said.

                            Macedonian politics have been rocked for months by Mr. Zaev’s release, bit by bit, of leaked transcripts of what he said were thousands of government-made recordings of conversations involving government officials and others. Mr. Zaev says they point to instances of corruption, vote-rigging and manipulation of the criminal justice system.

                            Officials in the conservative government of Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski have said that while some of the recordings appear to be legitimate, others are fabricated.

                            Mr. Gruevski has blamed an unnamed foreign intelligence service for making the recordings and instigating the scandal. Officials from his party have labeled it an attempt to topple the government.

                            The scandal is a blow the image of Macedonia, a poor country on the southern fringe of the Balkans, which has been seeking to join the European Union and NATO.

                            Mr. Zaev said at a news conference in Skopje this week that the opposition had more than 100,000 transcripts of conversations and over 18,000 text messages from more than 12,000 telephone numbers, and that it would continue to make them public and share them with prosecutors.

                            Western leaders have become increasingly alarmed over what they say is growing authoritarianism in Macedonia. Diplomats from the United States and Germany, among others, have called in recent weeks for a thorough and transparent investigation of the scandal.

                            “There are serious allegations about government abuse of power,” Jess L. Baily, the United States’ ambassador to Macedonia, said in an interview with a local television station last week.

                            Mr. Zaev was placed under preliminary indictment in January, and his passport was confiscated. The formal announcement of the indictment shows that prosecutors believe they have amassed sufficient evidence to bring him to trial, a date for which will be set shortly.

                            While Mr. Zaev remained free after the preliminary indictment, several others, including employees of Macedonia’s Interior Ministry, were placed in pretrial detention and will remain there now that the indictments have been formalized.
                            The leader of the left-wing Social Democratic Union of Macedonia, Zoran Zaev, has produced what he says is evidence of official corruption.

                            Comment

                            • ramo
                              Member
                              • Dec 2011
                              • 117

                              #74
                              Just a little correction. Zaev was charged only for “violence against representatives of the highest authorities not wiretapping. Other people are charged for wiretapping.

                              And i would like to congratulate todays reelection of gruevski as leader of vmro dpmne. The competition was very strong, he had at least 0 and at most 0 opponents in the internal congress of the party. He might have had one opponent (Jove Kekenovski) but they kicked him out of the party less than a month ago.

                              Comment

                              • ramo
                                Member
                                • Dec 2011
                                • 117

                                #75
                                There were clashes today in front of the government after the recordings with the boy killed by the special forces in 2011 was released which shows how they were trying to hide the killer and the whole case and deny responsibility.



                                Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


                                One police officer moved away from the barricade at the beginning letting the people pass and he left the spot with his equipment. He was the bravest man today.


                                Gruevski is over. It is matter of days.
                                Last edited by ramo; 05-05-2015, 05:23 PM.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X