MHRM
Condemns Greece's Continued
Blacklisting of Ethnic Macedonians
Press Release
July 26, 2003
The Macedonian Human Rights Movement of Canada (MHRMC) condemns
Greece's continued blacklisting of ethnic Macedonian human rights
activists and political refugees. Despite Greece's recent pledge
that Macedonian political refugees will finally be allowed to enter
Greece this summer, after 55 years in exile and in time for their
Third World Reunion, (see www.mhrmc.ca/press/03/detsa_begaltsi.html for background information) several instances of Macedonians being
denied entry into Greece have occurred during the past week.
On July 20, 2003, Australian citizen Janko Kalinchev, born in
the village of Ovcharani (Meliti in Greek), and Canadian citizen
Georgi Kizovski, born in Gabresh (Gavros), attempted to enter Greece
from the Republic of Macedonia in order to visit their birthplaces.
However, Greek border officials denied them entry and refused to
give them an explanation, instead saying that they were denied
entry for "other reasons". (See
the Refusal of
Entry given
to Canadian citizen Done Rakovsky when he was denied entry on
July 6, 2002)
According to Mr. Kizovski, "The Greek government keeps a
blacklist of people who are active in Macedonian organizations
abroad and who openly declare themselves as Macedonian. We were
obviously returned at the border because of our membership in the
Association of Refugee Children from the Aegean Part of Macedonia
(Detsa Begaltsi) in Australia and Canada."
Another Australian-Macedonian activist, Sotir Mitrev, was returned
at the border on July 24, 2003. This was the third time that he
has been denied entry into Greece.
"Makedonka", a Macedonian dance group from Canada, comprised
solely of members who were born in Canada, were also denied entry
into Greece last week. This reportedly occurred because the dance
group had the word "Macedonia" on their jackets and the
border officials did not "approve" of it.
Despite repeated requests by the MHRMC over the past 15 years,
the Canadian government has refused to confront Greece over its
systematic persecution of Canadian citizens. However, Canada has
made similar requests of other countries, including the United
States, when border incidents involving Canadian citizens occur.
(See www.mhrmc.ca/press/02/letter.html for the MHRMC's letter to
Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham, imploring Canada to investigate
the several cases of Canadian-Macedonians being denied entry into
Greece in 2002).
After Greece's "historic" announcement [English | Greek]of
June 8, 2003, in which exiled Macedonian political refugees were
to
be
allowed
entry into Greece for the first time since the Greek Civil War,
nationalistic elements of Greek society immediately pressured the
Greek government in order to reverse their decision. They were
worried that the political refugees would "incite" the
local Macedonian population into a heightened sense of nationalism.
The majority of Greek society supports its government's non-recognition
and discrimination of its large Macedonian minority.
The Greek government has succumbed to this pressure as it announced
on July 3, 2003 that the political refugees will be allowed to
enter the country from August 10 to October 30, and would only
be allowed to stay for 20 days. The date of the Detsa Begaltsi's
Third World Reunion was well publicized and was originally going
to take place from July 15-20. The Greek government's announcement
forced the organizers to reschedule the event to August 10-15,
which will cause a large number of political refugees, particularly
from Canada, the United States, and Australia, to miss the event
as they originally planned to enter Greece before July 10.
Furthermore,
Greece has backed down from its promise to seek an immediate solution
to the political refugee issue. Answering a question on the free
visit of "non-ethnic Greek" political refugees on June
8, 2003, Deputy Foreign Minister, Andreas Loverdos, stated that "since
we have overcome all these problems of the past and of the civil
war... we want to overcome this vestige too sooner rather than
later...during this summer." Evidently, Greece has chosen
its previous path of denying entry to Macedonians simply because
of their ethnicity and is seeking to impede the reunion in any
way possible.
The Macedonian Human Rights Movement of Canada calls on the international
community to apply pressure on Greece to end its racial profiling
of individuals of Macedonian ethnic background and to immediately
solve the issue of the Macedonian political refugees. The MHRMC
specifically asks that the EU end its hypocrisy in demanding that
new member states respect human rights standards while ignoring
human rights violations within the EU.
Bill Nicholov
Macedonian Human Rights Movement of Canada
Source URL: http://www.mhrmc.ca/press/03/detsa_begaltsi.html
E-mail: mail@mhrmc.ca
Website: www.mhrmc.ca
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