Macedonian Political Refugees Once Again
Denied
Democratic Rights by Greek Authorities
Press Release
August 10, 2003
Greek Helsinki Monitor & Minority Rights Group - Greece
Source: www.greekhelsinki.gr
Greek Helsinki Monitor (GHM) and Minority Rights Group-Greece
(MRG-G) denounce today's refusal by Greek authorities to dozens
of ethnic Macedonian political refugees and relatives to enter
Greece, preceded in recent days by similar refusals to a smaller
number of such persons. These persons or their relatives had left
Greece in the end of the Greek Civil War of the 1940s, alongside
ethnic Greeks who both fought with the losing communist side. In
1982, the Greek state decided to redress the consequences of the
civil war by allowing back in the country only the ethnic Greek
political refugees: this was discrimination on ethnic grounds among
a group of former Greek citizens, which is contrary to international
and European human rights standards.
In May 2003, the Greek state announced its intention to allow
the right to visit and consider the possibility of repatriation
of the ethnic non-Greek political refugees, after an apparent broad
consensus had emerged in the areas these persons had inhabited
(mainly Florina and Kastoria in Western Greek Macedonia). However,
the announcement was followed by a general backlash by influential
conservative and/or nationalist politicians, media, scholars, etc.
which led the government to backtrack and announce a limited right
to a twenty day visit and only between 10 August and 31 October
2003 to those persons. It turned out that this was to apply only
to those ethnic Macedonians whose birthplace was not mentioned
with the old Macedonian name (used before the "Hellenization" of
village and town names in the 1920s) and who were not on the state's
blacklist of activists.
Greece may strictly speaking have the right to object to the use
of only the Macedonian names for birthplaces in the passports of
some of these persons. However, it has found a way to deal with
the more important problem of the name of the Republic of Macedonia
it does not recognize: the holders of the passports of that country
get visas on separate paper, as the whole document is not recognized
by Greek authorities. Greece could have done the same for the persons
with Macedonian names of their birthplaces. Alternatively, Greece
stamps mail and products from Macedonia with the phrase "recognized
as FYROM". A similar procedure could have been used here as
well.
Finally, Greek authorities officially stated that some 80 Macedonian
activists living abroad are on a "blacklist." Preventing
their entrance on grounds of their activism directly contravenes
the special UN, OSCE, Council of Europe and EU provisions for the
state's responsibility to respect and even defend NGOs and human
rights activists. Moreover, in early July 2003, a Greek court in
Florina rejected once again the registration of an ethnic Macedonian
association, the Home of Macedonian Civilization, despite the fact
that the ECHR convicted Greece in 1998 (case of Sidiropoulos and
others) for a violation of freedom of association following a previous
series of court refusals to register the same association in the
late 1980s. Greece had -apparently deceivingly- pledged to the
Council of Europe that it would conform to the ECHR ruling.
The international community has an obligation to urge Greece to
conform to its international obligations or else sanction it; otherwise,
it will reinforce the impression that there are double standards
in the respect of human rights.
|