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  • Tomche Makedonche
    Senior Member
    • Oct 2011
    • 1123

    A joint list of non-party candidates endorsed by all anti-regime forces in Macedonia is the best way to defeat Nikola Gruevski, a prominent voice in the new leftist Levica party says.


    Zdravko Saveski - Not Your Usual Macedonian Politician

    A joint list of non-party candidates endorsed by all anti-regime forces in Macedonia is the best way to defeat Nikola Gruevski, a prominent voice in the new leftist Levica party says.

    A front man in the recently formed far-left Levica party, social rights activist and currently unemployed political science professor prefers causal clothes to suits and shiny shoes. It’s a look, he says, that fits his ideological standpoint.

    Shortly after the main opposition Social Democrats, SDSM, last week said it aimed to widen the opposition front before the December 11 general elections, Saveski - in the name of his party - proposed a slightly different approach, which is to unite all opposition forces behind a list of non-party candidates.

    He says this would break with the tradition of election coalitions led by one big party and would have a better chance of motivating numerous abstainers whose votes could prove crucial in defeating the ruling Nikola Gruevski’s VMRO DPMNE party, which has held power since 2006.

    “This proposition gives an opportunity to those people who simply cannot force themselves to vote for the SDSM, even though they are clearly against the regime,” he says.

    This way, they could vote “not for a particular political party but for the very citizens who are fighting the regime. “This could stimulate people and create a winning euphoria. The question then would no longer be: can we defeat the regime in elections - but by how big a lead?” Saveski maintains.

    In the past two general elections, some 37 per cent of the eligible voters in Macedonia did not cast ballots.Saveski says the proposed non-party, non-partisan candidates would be prominent professionals and proven “anti-regime fighters” but not members of parties.

    The idea, which has yet to be discussed with other opposition parties, also envisages the formation of a provisional expert government after the elections, again comprised of non-party “anti-regime forces”.

    This government would be tasked with carrying out numerous stalled reforms before new elections in which all political subjects could compete on their own, relieved of the need to unite in the fight against VMRO DPMNE.“

    The main question is, will the leading people in the SDSM and in other parties be willing to make this sacrifice and give up their MPs’ seats for the greater good?” Saveski asks.

    He qualifies the description of Levica is a radical leftist movement, insisting on an important difference between their brand of far left politics and violence, which they do not support.

    “We are a leftist party but are far from the extremists. Insisting on fulfillment in practice of Paragraph 1 of the constitution, which defines Macedonia as a social state, is simply not radical,” he says.“We are not asking much when we demand respect for workers’ rights. One might argue that we are too soft in that respect,” he adds. “The bosses in Macedonia have adopted the mentality of being allowed to do whatever they want. They paint each political party that refuses to dance to their tune as extremist,” he continues.

    Saveski also dismisses parallels drawn with the old Communist Party of the Yugoslav era.“There were some positive aspects in the past system, especially in the field of social policies. The living standard of a large part of the population was much higher back then … but there were also many faults, especially concerning democracy,” he recalls. “We are not only more democratic than the Communist party in the past system but are more democratic than all of today’s parties,” he insists. “We want further democratization.”

    Saveski says he feels disappointed by the actions of the left-wing Greek government led by the Siriza party, which is widely seen as having backed away from its original radical ideas.“We were seriously disappointed by Siriza. Power must not be more valuable that the principles,” he says. “Siriza did the opposite and made a big mistake, in our eyes, by accepting the diktats of international capital. If [Prime Minister Alexis] Tsipras felt unable to withstand the pressure of international capital, he should have resigned,” Saveski continues.

    Regarding Macedonia’s strategic goals of joining the EU and NATO, Saveski says a wider debate is needed on the pros and cons of NATO membership, though as a party, they are against the idea.

    He believes NATO membership cannot guarantee Macedonia’s stability, as the military alliance is only obliged to protect its members from an attack from abroad - and Macedonia does not face an external threat, he says.“The greatest security risk [for Macedonia] comes from a civil war and NATO cannot interfere in internal affairs,” he adds. “To prevent this risk, we need an improvement to inter-ethnic relations, not NATO membership. The solution lies in the fight against nationalism, not in militarism,” he explains.

    On the EU, by contrast, Saveski agrees that Macedonia should continue to seek membership of the European club – but with conditions. The country does not blindly accept everything that is required by the EU, especially when it does not suit its people’s interests.“We opt not only for the fulfillment of all the [EU’s] required democratic standards but their further enhancement,” Saveski continues.“The EU was a great model of social justice - but no longer. That is why the EU states are expressing their disagreements with Brussels.”

    Asked why - although Levica has no formal leader but a collective presidency - only a few Levica members are known to the public, Saveski insists this is more of a practical problem.“Some of our people are employed and cannot give statements during working hours … That is why we are trying to promote as many different people as we can as guests on [TV and radio] political panels or through interviews scheduled in the afternoons and in the evenings,” he argues.

    “The social profile of our members is quite interesting,” he continues. “Many are either people on low wages, are unemployed or are students, many of whom come from families of workers and of former employees in bankrupt firms [in former state ownership].”

    In April and May, Saveski and another party member were placed under house detention for 50 days following charges that they took part in an attack on the President’s office in Skopje on May 12 and 13.The attack occurred during the street protests against the President’s decision to pardon 56 top politicians and their associates from criminal investigation [a move that the President later retracted].

    The legal case against Saveski is not over. In the meantime, he insists his detention was part of a plan by the authorities to intimidate him and other protesters.“They realized they were gravely mistaken when they thought they could break us,” he says.“We are highly motivated by the fight for social justice and are ready to sacrifice a lot in that fight. People who have ideals cannot be easily defeated by a corrupt government,” he concludes.
    “There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus and you’ve got to make it stop, and you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all” - Mario Savio

    Comment

    • Tomche Makedonche
      Senior Member
      • Oct 2011
      • 1123

      Ethnic Albanian defendants accused of participating in a two-day gunbattle with Macedonian security forces in Kumanovo in May 2015 want two political party leaders to appear as witnesses at their trial.


      Macedonia Shootout Suspects Want Politicians to Testify

      Ethnic Albanian defendants accused of participating in a two-day gunbattle with Macedonian security forces in Kumanovo in May 2015 want two political party leaders to appear as witnesses at their trial.

      Lawyers for 37 defendants accused of participating in the shootout with police that left 18 people dead in the northern Macedonian town of Kumanovo want a retired police general who is now head of the small opposition Dignity party, Stojance Angelov, and the head of the junior party in the country’s ruling coalition, Democratic Union for Integration chief Ali Ahmeti, to appear as witnesses.

      But as the trial continued on Thursday, a source from the prosecution expressed doubt whether the Skopje Criminal Court would allow it.

      “The law is clear. Additional witnesses cannot be proposed [after the trial starts], unless there was need for them to answer questions which emerged from the testimonies of some other witnesses,” a prosecutor who is working on the case told BIRN on condition of anonymity.

      Twenty-nine of the defendants are accused of being part of an ethnic Albanian terrorist group, and the eight others are charged with aiding them. They deny the charges.

      The lawyers for the defendants said at the last trial session on Tuesday insisted that the politicians could shed new light on the case if they testified.

      Former police general and Dignity party chief Stojance Angelovtold BIRN that he is probably being asked to testify because of a statement which he made just two weeks before the shootout in which he practically predicted the incident.

      He then said that the government might stage an incident in order to provoke inter-ethnic conflict and thus divert attention from anti-government protests which were in full swing at the time.

      Angelov said that he stands by his statement.

      “I have information that two million euros were given to the Albanians, who have nothing to do with the NLA [the now-disbanded Albanian guerrilla force which fought in the 2001 armed conflict in Macedonia] and who are criminals from the Lipkovo region [near Kumanovo],” he told BIRN.

      “Their task was to kill several police or army staff and to provoke inter-ethnic conflict, falsely pretending to be NLA members,” he alleged.

      Some of the defendants have also alleged in court that the entire incident was staged by high-ranking police officials.

      However, the defendants said they did not know any more details about the alleged plot, and insisted that the only ones who would have known were their commanders, who were killed in the shootout.

      According to testimony given by some of the defendants during the open phase of the trial, one member of the armed group contacted Democratic Union for Integration party leader Ali Ahmeti on the morning of May 10, when the shootout had just begun.

      The gunman asked Ahmeti to help end what he called a police attack on the group, according to the testimony heard in court.

      Media have speculated that this might be the reason why the defence now wants to call Ahmeti to testify.

      Ahmeti confirmed in an interview with BIRN in June that he had contact with the group, but insisted that there was nothing he could do at that time.

      Both Ahmeti and Angelov have declined to say whether they would testify if called to do so by the court.

      The trial opened to the public this week, after being closed for the entire summer while dozens of protected witnesses testified.
      “There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus and you’ve got to make it stop, and you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all” - Mario Savio

      Comment

      • DraganOfStip
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2011
        • 1253

        State auditor finds numerous financial issues in MES

        Well,this went WAAAAAY below radar in most (pro-government) media yesterday,but the numbers involved are simply staggering.
        Moreover,the auditor is not some freelancer or a pro-opposition individual but it is the STATE auditor,which puts extra weight on the issue.

        The state auditor found a lot of discrepancies in the work of the Ministry of Education and Science (MES) last year during an audit that took place between March 1st and 30th this year:

        For hiring people without the consent of the Ministry of Finance,MES unlawfully spent 173 000 euros;

        Seven MES employees received paychecks as high as 40 000 denars (660 eur) with no record of them actually working OR showing up;

        26 part-time workers (from other ministries) without clear work specifications,obligations and evidence for employment were hired in the minister's office without the consent of the Ministry of Finance,and were paid 70 000 euros;

        For hotel accommodation of it's employees and foreign guests the MES spent 14 000 euros without travel warrants,guest invitations or event agendas,11 500 of which for 5-star hotels;

        For taxi transportation of it's employees outside of working hrs the MES spent 3900 euros;

        88 000 euros were spent for fuel,without precising for which vehicles and what purpose;

        83 000 euros were spent at restaurants and other hospitality objects without proof for the kind and purpose of the service;

        During 2015, 8.349.000 denars were spent for goods and service supplies without the mandatory official public supply procedure (tender);

        383 000 euros were paid for rates of interests due to overdue payments;

        Large number of vocation books translation fees cannot be traced because there was no paperwork for contracts nor the agreed fee amounts with the translators...
        This is how our tax money is spent nowadays I guess.

        Недомаќинско трошење за ресторани и хотели од 5 ѕвезди, користење на превоз на сметка на државата надвор од работно време, ангажирање на лица во кабинетот на министерот вработени во други институции, а без согласнос од Министерството за финансии, ...
        Last edited by DraganOfStip; 11-01-2016, 02:06 AM.
        ”A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims... but accomplices”
        ― George Orwell

        Comment

        • Tomche Makedonche
          Senior Member
          • Oct 2011
          • 1123

          Originally posted by DraganOfStip View Post
          Well,this went WAAAAAY below radar in most (pro-government) media yesterday,but the numbers involved are simply staggering.
          Moreover,the auditor is not some freelancer or a pro-opposition individual but it is the STATE auditor,which puts extra weight on the issue.

          The state auditor found a lot of discrepancies in the work of the Ministry of Education and Science (MES) last year during an audit that took place between March 1st and 30th this year:


          This is how our tax money is spent nowadays I guess.

          http://www.time.mk/c/12afb8d038/drza...-5-zvezdi.html
          This may account for some of the above:

          Macedonia's authorities are having a hard time finding workplaces for 1,750 or so ethnic minority civil servants who have been employed in line with the 2001 peace accord but who linger on the state payroll at home.


          Macedonia Struggles to Give Minority Civil Servants Jobs


          Macedonia's authorities are having a hard time finding workplaces for 1,750 or so ethnic minority civil servants who have been employed in line with the 2001 peace accord but who linger on the state payroll at home.

          The Macedonian government body in charge of implementing the 2001 peace accord says it is struggling to find posts for about 1,750 members of ethnic minorities who have been employed as civil servants to match the peace deal terms - but have no actual job to do.

          "We are in the process of assigning jobs to some of these people," the Government Directorate for implementing the accord explained.

          "In some cases there is a shortage of physical space for the new employees. Other problems are geographical in nature, because the people live in one town and should work in another."

          According to the draft budget for 2017, which is now before parliament, some 50 of them now have real engagements at this institution. But the rest of the 1,750 are drawing their wages at home. Some have been waiting for years now for jobs in the public administration.

          The 2017 budget, like last years, allocates 9.6 million euro for the directorate for next year, nearly all of this sum will be spent on wages.

          In August, the Vice Prime Minister in charge of the Framework Agreement, Festim Halili, said the government wanted to speed the process of assigning jobs to another 800 of these workers. But the Directorate has not disclosed how many of these 800 have since got jobs.

          One would-be civil servant told BIRN under condition of anonymity that he had been waiting to be given a workplace since 2009.

          "The last time they called me was for the floods [in August in Skopje] when I thought they would finally get me a job.

          "They called me to ask me to participate in cleaning up [the flood-hit Skopje suburb of] Singelic. I told them I was already there, helping my relatives," he told BIRN.

          Under the 2001 Ohrid Accord, which ended a six-month armed conflict with discontented ethnic Albanians, Macedonia was obliged to increase the number of ethnic minority civil servants in order to reflect their actual proportion of the country's population.

          The largest minority by far, ethnic Albanians who make up about a quarter of Macedonia's population, had long been under-represented in the public sector.

          According to the Directorate's data, 84 per cent of the unassigned civil servants are ethnic Albanians. The rest are Turks, Serbs, Roma and others.

          Latest analysis by the Ombudsman's Office, on ethnic representation in the workplace, from 2015, shows that 73 per cent of the 109,000 employees in the state administration are now Macedonians and 18.6 per cent are Albanian.

          This was a marked improvement on the situation some years ago. By comparison, the figures for 2007 were 83 per cent and 10.7 per cent respectively.

          Sloboden Pecat, the daily newspaper that claims to have got hold of the list of employees who are fictively assigned as employees at the Directorate, says the most common job description on the list is "junior associate", which brings with it a monthly net salary of some 350 euros. The daily says the wages for senior associates range from 500 to 900 euros.

          While the official number of "unassigned" minority civil servants is 1,750, opposition parties suspect the real number of those who receive civil service wages but sit at home is far higher.
          “There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus and you’ve got to make it stop, and you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all” - Mario Savio

          Comment

          • DraganOfStip
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2011
            • 1253

            Deputy Labor Minister from DPMNE involved in several car accidents

            Opposition MPs demand resignation of Deputy Labour Minister Dime Spasov for reckless behaviour after being involved in car accidents that he tried to cover up.


            Spasov reportedly caused two car accidents on Friday by bumping into parked cars in central Skopje allegedly while driving under the influence of alcohol.
            The police said in a press release that they stopped him after they were alerted about the car accidents.
            According to the police, Spasov initially admitted being behind the steering wheel but soon fled the scene on foot, leaving his female companion inside the ministry vehicle.
            Later the same night, Spasov’s official driver insisted he had been driving the vehicle but the police said his testimony did not match with that of Spasov’s female companion, who claimed that Spasov was driving.
            In later press releases issued during the weekend, the ruling party insisted that the deputy minister had been chased by "ethnic Albanians with serious criminal backgrounds" and had bumped into the cars trying to evade them.
            Spasov has filed charges against two Albanians, Daut Dinarica and Omer Adzami, who on Sunday also appeared at police stations and opposed his claims.
            It is not uncommon that people get involved in traffic accidents,after all it's one of the risks to operating a motor vehicle,so from that aspect there is nothing scandalous about this event.
            However, here are a couple of side notes that ARE:

            1) The car was owned by the Agency of Employment,and not the Ministry of Labor and Social Politics that the deputy minister was a part of.
            So the first thing that the director of the Agency of Employment needs to explain to the public is how one of their vehicles was operated by a person not employed in the Agency;

            2) Even if the vehicle was "loaned" to him, he needs to have a general warranty to operate it,or at least a signed paper that the Agency of Employment is allowing that vehicle to be operated by employees of another state institution,which was clearly not the case;

            3) The vehicle was operated outside of working hours (the incident happened at night) meaning it was used not for state purposes but for personal ones,which is by itself a fellony;

            4) Dime Spasov,a married man,was with a "female companion" in the vehicle.At that time of night.I think any further comments are unnecessary;

            5) Once the police arrived,he initially admits driving the vehicle,but suddenly flees the scene by foot,which is yet another offense;

            6) His personal driver later tries to take the blame for him by stating in the police that HE was driving, which clearly didn't correspond with the statement of the "female companion" who also stated Spasov was driving;

            7) There were indications that he was DUI but the police is yet to announce whether they made an alcotest on him;

            8) After he returned at the station later,he makes a statement that there was a group of Albanians chasing him,which caused him to drive faster and result with him hitting several parked vehicles ()

            9) The Albanians pointed by him came to the police station by their own will to deny his claims;

            10) DPMNE in their statement regarding this tried to minimize the incident by describing it as a simple "traffic violation with not more than 150 eur of damage", not mentioning any of the above and didn't claim any moral responsibility from Spasov, nor did they call for disciplinary actions against him within the party.

            All of the above would be more than enough not only for this man's resignation but also expulsion from the party in any other country.
            But let's not forget this is Macedonia.
            Last edited by DraganOfStip; 11-01-2016, 02:43 AM.
            ”A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims... but accomplices”
            ― George Orwell

            Comment

            • Risto the Great
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2008
              • 15658

              Sounds like a future president in the making.
              Risto the Great
              MACEDONIA:ANHEDONIA
              "Holding my breath for the revolution."

              Hey, I wrote a bestseller. Check it out: www.ren-shen.com

              Comment

              • Stojacanec
                Member
                • Dec 2009
                • 809

                We have a hoon driver that is the treasurer in South Australia.

                I didn't think Tom Koutsantonis was capable of being head of treasury of the TMF's let alone the state!

                Comment

                • DraganOfStip
                  Senior Member
                  • Aug 2011
                  • 1253

                  Petty officer fired for participating in anti-government protests

                  I mentioned several times about the patronage system in Macedonia which is the mechanism that holds Grujo in power for a decade now.
                  The number of public/state employees has increased by 300% since 10 years ago (mostly by obedient party members and sympathizers) and their votes combined with those of their immediate family is keeping DPMNE's rule safe.
                  There have been a number of cases in which these people were (ab)used by the ruling party to serve their needs,the most disgusting one being their rounding up for counter-protests in the latest anti-government protest wave throughout Macedonia in order to demonstrate "the common folk's support for DPMNE" as it was presented in their media.

                  This is a case of one brave woman who decided not to obey the party and as a result she lost her job, something all public employees are threatened with in order to keep voting and supporting Grujo (my wife's uncle is a field inspector for the public water company for over 20 years and is still rounded up for every major rally of DPMNE simply because the director of the water company orders his employees to do so).
                  The woman was employed in the army as a petty officer and participated in the anti-government protests outside of her working hours and because of that she suffered a lot of pressure in her work surrounding.
                  First the Ministry Of Defense began moving her to various barracks throughout the country (she lives and worked in Skopje until then), but eventually she was recently fired and is now unemployed.
                  She stated that she will now sue the MOD in search for justice.

                  Another strong message that the party must have it's support if you want to keep your job.
                  Macedonian reality,2016:

                  ”A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims... but accomplices”
                  ― George Orwell

                  Comment

                  • DraganOfStip
                    Senior Member
                    • Aug 2011
                    • 1253

                    Macedonia's gross foreign debt officially reached over 8 billion dollars

                    Macedonia ends 2016 with a record-high 8,4 billion dollar foreign debt which is 78,1% of the country's GDP.
                    This is the highest debt ever that Macedonia had towards other countries in history.
                    Borrowing money to pay previous borrowed money + interest has become the rule rather than the exception thanks to increasing pensions in an unsustainable pension system and salaries for even more party employments in the already-full administration which counts more than 185 000 people (in administration only,not counting state institutions like army,police,public utility services etc).
                    Something that should make everyone in the Republic wonder how much more can the balloon inflate before it pops and we become the next Greece...

                    Last edited by DraganOfStip; 01-05-2017, 07:02 AM.
                    ”A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims... but accomplices”
                    ― George Orwell

                    Comment

                    • Tomche Makedonche
                      Senior Member
                      • Oct 2011
                      • 1123

                      Macedonia's main parties have given contrasting reactions to the decision of the SJO to drop all charges against the leader of the opposition Social Democrats, SDSM, Zoran Zaev.


                      Macedonia Prosecution Drops Charges Against Zaev

                      Macedonia's main parties have given contrasting reactions to the decision of the SJO to drop all charges against the leader of the opposition Social Democrats, SDSM, Zoran Zaev.

                      Macedonia's ruling VMRO DPMNE party has condemned the Special Prosecution, SJO, after it dropped all charges in the case codenamed "Coup" against opposition leader Zoran Zaev, on Wednesday.

                      The SJO said it was dropping charges because the evidence it had gathered, after inheriting this case last year from the regular prosecution, pointed in another direction.

                      "The SJO has come to the conclusion that there is a contradiction between the evidence and the charges in the 'Coup' case. Thus, this prosecution has proved its professionalism," the former Macedonian judge in Strasbourg, Margarita Caca Nikolovska, said.

                      "Having in mind that the SJO had a responsibility to gather evidence both against and in favour of the defendants, this outcome was to be expected," lawyer Oliver Vuksanovic told Telma TV.

                      In January 2015, just days before the opposition started releasing compromising telephone conversations of top state officials, the then Prime Minister, Nikola Gruevski, used a nationwide TV address to accuse Zaev attempting a coup. Zaev was later charged by the regular prosecution with attempted “blackmail and and violence against top state officials”. Gruevski claimed Zaev had threatened to publish compromising data from the wiretapped conversations involving top state officials unless a caretaker government was formed that would include his own Social Democratic Party, SDSM.

                      In a press release, the SDSM said the collapse of the case against its leader meant that "the biggest, most desperate and the lowest attempt at a mounted court case in Macedonia's history, initiated by former Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski, has failed".

                      But Gruevski's ruling VMRO DPMNE party called the SJO decision "shameful" and claimed it was made in order to save the SJO's "protege", Zaev. This party added that it saw no legal basis for the continued existence of the SJO.

                      The SJO was formed in late 2015 as part of an EU-sponsored political crisis agreement, and was tasked to investigate claims that Gruevski had arranged the illegal surveillance of thousands of people.

                      Gruevski meanwhile claimed that unnamed "foreign services" had illegally eavesdropped on officials and had given the recordings to the opposition in order to destabilize the country.

                      The SJO took over the "Coup" case last year but has until now refrained from commenting on its findings, as it was waiting for a court session to start before disclosing its future intentions. The scheduled court sessions were postponed several times last year.

                      Meanwhile, the SJO has opened several other investigations and launched court cases aimed at resolving the same question about who was responsible for the mass wiretapping. Although the SJO did not name former PM Gruevski as suspect, all these fresh cases and investigations seem to support opposition claims that he and his cousin, the former secret police chief, Saso Mijalkov might have been involved.

                      In November, the Special Prosecution launched investigation codenamed "Target" and said at least 10 current or former senior secret police officials ran the mass illegal wiretapping operation that is the focus of the country’s political crisis. The SJO then said it had evidence that the suspects illegally surveyed at least 5,827 telephone numbers from 2008 to 2015.

                      In another case codenamed "Fortress", seven secret police seniors and employees stand trial for "illegal destruction of documents" for their alleged attempt to cover up tracks of their involvement in the wiretapping scandal.
                      “There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus and you’ve got to make it stop, and you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all” - Mario Savio

                      Comment

                      • Albo
                        Member
                        • May 2014
                        • 304

                        Investment in Macedonia Falls Short of Govt Hype

                        I believe this type of journalism is lacking in the region, much more of it is needed to keep political parties honest and responsible for their failures..

                        On a side note - On all the below mentioned foreign investments over the years, none are in Albanian majority regions..


                        Investment in Macedonia Falls Short of Govt Hype
                        BIRN database shows foreign firms invested only a small fraction of money in Macedonian that officials said was in the pipeline.

                        Aleksandar Janev
                        BIRN
                        Skopje


                        Had all the foreign investments announced by the Macedonian authorities in the last ten years been realized, the country would have at least 138 new factories and other manufacturing or service facilities today, worth 3.8 billion euros and employing 62,701 people.

                        However, several months’ research by BIRN, entitled “Foreign investments uncovered”, reveals the inaccuracy of the perception fostered by the authorities that in the past ten years Macedonia has attracted many foreign investors, which have built a new factory and created jobs almost every month.

                        Of the 138 announced foreign investments included in the database, it appears that 51 foreign companies built factories, plants, hotels or other facilities while another 44 investments are ongoing. Most of these were announced in the last two years, and their outcome is still impossible to predict, though some have begun to invest and factories are still being built.

                        However, the research also showed that 43 foreign investments were not realized at all, or failed, which is almost a third of the total number of investments included in the “Foreign investment under scrutiny” database.

                        BIRN’s data from the Central Registry show the high level of non-current assets of the foreign companies, including the value of all the land, buildings, equipment, which most precisely reveal the disappointing amount of money investors actually invested.

                        The survey shows that the analysed foreign investors invested a total of 579.64 million euros in the last ten years in Macedonia, which is almost one-seventh of the amount (3,79 billion euros) announced by the investors themselves or by government officials.

                        Moreover, this amount also includes money that the state approved for investors in a form of assistance.

                        A total of 26 foreign companies have received this state assistance. But the amount that citizens have paid in taxes and other public duties to finance the entrance of investors is not known. In the decisions issued by the Commission for the Protection of Competition, those amounts are marked “XXX”.

                        BIRN’s research reveals an enigma surrounding the number of new jobs opened in the factories built by the foreign investors.

                        Data obtained by BIRN concerning the number of employees in the foreign companies, included in the database to the end of 2016, show only 20,246 new jobs were created, which is one-third of the announced number of 62,701 jobs.

                        The low realization of foreign investments - seven times less money invested than the sums announced and three times fewer jobs than promised, shows that far fewer factories were built and people employed than the government’s PR people announced.

                        In fact, research by BIRN showed that the government PR worked so intensively on promoting foreign investments, fuelling public expectations that new factories and jobs would open constantly, that one investment was promoted several times over, often with different figures concerning the size of the investment and the number of jobs that would be created.

                        Investments timed for elections

                        Analysis of the timeframe for the promotion of these investments, whether it was signing a memorandum of cooperation, laying the cornerstones or cutting red tapes for completed factories, shows these PR activities intensified around elections.

                        Thus, talk of new investments heightened in the last two years, as Macedonia’s political crisis escalated, and over a period when the date of the early parliamentary elections was repeatedly postponed.

                        In 2016, for example, 26 investments were announced. This practice of announcing investments became particularly frequent immediately before the election, when almost representatives of the ruling VMRO DPMNE party, especially the party leader Nikola Gruevski, almost daily announced a new foreign investment and promised people new jobs in those factories at rallies and on social networks.

                        In 2015, the authorities announced 21 investments. But a record number of 30 investments was announced in 2014, when parliamentary and presidential elections were held. Earlier, in 2013, when there were local elections, 16 investments were promoted, mostly in regions outside Skopje.

                        If we rank the investments based on the sums announced by the investors, the biggest investment in the country, which is still ongoing, is by the company Euromak resources.

                        This firm announced it would invest 500 million dollars [406 million euros] in excavating precious metals in a village near Strumica, called Ilovica. The announcement of this investment dates back to 2007 and the concession agreement was signed five years later.

                        The second largest investment is by the Turkish company Limak, which is also under implementation.

                        This company bought construction land near the old railway station back in February 2012 for the purpose of building hotels, business and shopping centres and restaurants. However, its investment of 250 million euros, following a break of four years, was reaffirmed last October on the eve of parliamentary elections.

                        Among the biggest announced investments are several that were never realized at all.

                        These include one by Weibo Group, a Turkish company that planned to construct a textile centre in the industrial zone of Rankovce near Kriva Palanka worth 315 million euros.

                        Another was by US company DuPont and Irish company Ethanol Europe Revenues, which were supposed to invest 250 million euros by 2016 in a factory producing cellulosic bioethanol in the Pelagonia region.

                        Another failed investment was by the Indian billionaire Subrata Roy who visited Macedonia several times and together with the authorities pledged to invest at least 200 million euros. In the end he vanished, together with the plans.

                        Britain’s Johnson Matthey invested the largest sum compared to all the other investors who built factories in the country.

                        According to the balance sheet for 2015, it has non-current assets of nearly 100 million euros. However, according to the Directorate for Technological Industrial Development Zones, the company was supposed to invest 145 million euros.

                        Analysis of the data from the database shows that only four foreign companies that built factories in Macedonia invested as much money as they promised, or more.

                        Germany’s Kromberg & Schubert exceeded expectations the most. It announced it would invest 20 million euros. According to the non-current assets from the balance sheet for 2015, the actual amount has totalled about 29 million euros.

                        Germany’s Taurus Farms, which announced that it will invest 5 million euros in a distribution centre and in apple plantations in Bogdanci, has almost twice as much in non-current assets, about 9.6 million euros.

                        The Dutch company Anthura also invested more than the promised 6 million in a factory in Kocani, while Style Con, which is also Dutch, invested 4.1 million euros in Staro Nagoricane, which is around 600,000 euros more than the sum announced.

                        When it comes to opening new jobs, the largest employer among the foreign investors is Draxlmaie, which employed 5,507 people by 2016, followed by Kromberg & Schubert, with 3,116 employees, Adient Seating, former Johnson Controls, in Stip, with 1,756 employees, Amphenol with 1,135 employees and Van Hool with 820.

                        Data obtained by BIRN on the number of employees also reveal huge variations between 2016 and 2015.

                        Most investors who have already opened factories or are implementing their investments increased the number of employees in the past year.

                        First on the list is the company Kromberg & Schubert, which created 851 new jobs in the year, followed by companies that started production in 2016; Key Safety Systems opened 627 new jobs, Amphenol opened 620, Lear, 437, and Gentherm, 346.

                        However, many foreign companies whose factories or facilities are already in operation reduced their workforces in 2016.

                        TAV cut its workforce most, by 236, followed by Draxlmaier, which had 223 fewer workers, Visteon, which laid off 194 people, Agrofruktis, whose staff fell from 152 to nine employees, and Prodis, where staff numbers fell from 72 to five.

                        IT firms promised millions, invested thousands

                        In terms of industries, most foreign investments announced in the last ten years come from the automotive industry - 24 companies. Ten of these were realized, seven are ongoing and seven were not realized.

                        The second most common type of investments was in the IT sector, where 15 were announced and ten realized.

                        At the same time, this sector saw the greatest failure rate in terms of the actual invested amount compared to the sum announced.

                        Musala Soft announced an investment of 20 million euros but non-current assets of the company show an investment of only 14,000 euros.

                        Allocate Software announced an investment of 7.5 million euros but actually invested around 93,000 euros. The firm 6 PM announced 5 million euros but only invested 44,000.

                        Among other industries, ten investments were in the textile industry, nine in agriculture and eight in manufacturing rubber and plastics.

                        Analysis of the countries of origin of the foreign investors shows Turkey was the biggest foreign investor in Macedonia followed by Germany, the United States, Britain and Italy.

                        - See more at: http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/arti....XUJYkn6T.dpuf

                        Comment

                        • Albo
                          Member
                          • May 2014
                          • 304

                          If lake Ohrid was to lose its world Heritage status because of this proposed development it would be a serious tragedy!

                          Europe's Oldest Lake in Macedonia Threatened by Urbanization

                          Comment

                          • Tomche Makedonche
                            Senior Member
                            • Oct 2011
                            • 1123

                            In a bid to curb the record-breaking levels of air pollution, Macedonia's green party is demanding that a health emergency be declared in the capital Skopje and in other towns.


                            Air Pollution Grips Macedonian Capital

                            In a bid to curb the record-breaking levels of air pollution, Macedonia's green party is demanding that a health emergency be declared in the capital Skopje and in other towns.

                            The Democratic Renewal of Macedonia, DOM party – the country’s green political force – has accused the authorities of not doing enough to curb the dangerous air pollution in Skopje and other major towns.

                            DOM said that the free bus transport that the Skopje authorities launched on Tuesday, in an attempt to reduce car journeys and therefore pollution, was insufficient to deal with the crisis.

                            "Bearing in mind that the air pollution is affecting all larger Macedonian towns, DOM insists that the government should declare a state of emergency," the party said.

                            Since the start of winter, when air pollution usually reaches its peak, the greens have been demanding a no-vehicle zone in central Skopje, the temporary closure of all construction sites, the banning of vehicles that do not satisfy the Euro 4 emissions standard, as well as lower electricity prices to encourage households to stop using fossil fuels and wood for heat.

                            The greens have also demanded a system in which cars with odd and even numbers on their plates are allowed to be used on alternate days to reduce pollution.

                            But Skopje mayor Koce Trajanovski said he could not act without parliamentary approval.

                            "We can't do this alone. For that we need a functional parliament that would vote for such a law," Trajanovski told media at a press conference on Monday.

                            Macedonia has had no government since early elections on December 11 as talks on forming an administration continue.

                            For several years, air pollution levels in Skopje, but also in the towns of Bitola, Kicevo, Tetovo Kumanovo and Kavadarci, have reached record highs in the winter months.

                            Particularly problematic is the high level of PM10 particles, small breathable specks that are considered one of the worst air polluters. Due to their small size they can penetrate the lungs and are known to cause cancers and other diseases.

                            The pollution with PM10 particles in the capital on Monday night reached a staggering 680 index points. According to European air quality standards, this is almost 14 times higher than the highest acceptable level of 50 index points and more than enough to warrant declaring a health warning.

                            The charts on the website mojvozduh.eu that displays hourly data from all the measuring stations in Macedonia shows that the pollution in the capital peaked during the weekend and on Monday.

                            The launch of this privately maintained site several years ago, after the authorities failed to provide timely data on air pollution despite popular demand, raised awareness among Macedonians about the deadly smog.

                            "I avoid going outside when there is a thick fog. On Monday I did not take my children to school because of the pollution, after seeing that in my neighbourhood it is on the red level," said Ivana Stameska from Skopje, who adds that she regularly checks the website.

                            "It is becoming unbearable. The air smells foul. We have to do something in the long run," said Glogor Botev, another Skopje resident.

                            "I definitely support the declaration of an emergency. This is a health disaster and we are doing nothing. People should stay home," suggested Aleksandar, 33, a resident of Skopje's municipality of Centar.

                            The air pollution has long caused political differences.

                            The main opposition Social Democrats, SDSM claim that the pollution has surged in the last few years, mainly as a result of a government measure to allow import of hundreds of thousands of used vehicles from abroad and the administration’s lack of a systematic strategy on pollution.

                            The main ruling VMRO DPMNE party on the other hand insists that the pollution was there before, but no one was measuring it.
                            “There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus and you’ve got to make it stop, and you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all” - Mario Savio

                            Comment

                            • vicsinad
                              Senior Member
                              • May 2011
                              • 2337

                              Hardline protest in Skopje today against Albanian as a second language and asking people from both main Macedonian parties to unite against the Albanian agenda:

                              Платформата на Албанците не е во насока на подобрување на нечии права, рекоа учесниците на вечерашниот марш, барајќи политичарите да го отфрлат документот потпишан од албанските партии.

                              Comment

                              • Redsun
                                Member
                                • Jul 2013
                                • 409

                                Its a selfish demand from the Albanians. Much talk on implementing this, but nothing on how it would work, no consideration on the effect it would have.

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