Greek nationalists seek momentum amid Macedonia talks

People walk past a statue of “Alexander the Great” on the waterfront of Thessaloniki. Greece and Macedonia seek to end a dispute that has raged for 27 years over the former Yugoslav republic’s name. (AFP)
Updated 19 January 2018
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Greek nationalists seek momentum amid Macedonia talks

ATHENS: A quarter of a century after Greece saw an unprecedented million-strong march in its name row with Macedonia, nationalists are trying to whip up similar sentiment amid a new push to solve the festering issue.
Athens argues that its neighbor’s name — adopted after the Balkan country won independence in 1991 — suggests that Skopje also has territorial claims to the northern Greek region of Macedonia.
The region boasts the important port cities of Thessaloniki and Kavala and was the center of Alexander the Great’s ancient kingdom, a source of Greek pride.
Amid signs of a possible breakthrough, with new talks this week in New York between Greek and Macedonian negotiators, Greek nationalists plan to protest this weekend against any deal allowing Macedonia to use the name.
Greece’s objections have already hampered Skopje’s bid to join the European Union and NATO.
At the United Nations, Macedonia is known as the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM). But the Security Council acknowledged that this was a provisional name when it agreed to membership.
In 1992, at a time of nationalist fervor across the Balkans, over a million Greeks — one in 10 of the population — joined a rally in Thessaloniki, northern Greece’s biggest city to proclaim that “Macedonia is Greek.”
The weekend rallies in Thessaloniki and the southern Peloponnese peninsula will likely be much smaller.
UN negotiator Matthew Nimetz — a 24-year veteran on the issue — said he was “very hopeful” that a solution is within reach.
“The climate has changed,” says Christina Koulouri, a professor of political science and history at Athens’ Panteio University, even though the issue “remains sensitive for all of Greek society.”
“A generation has passed and society has matured,” adds Nikos Maratzidis, professor of Balkan studies at the University of Thessaloniki.
For the time being, the backlash in Greece seems to be dominated by hard-line clerics, the far-right and Greek diaspora groups.
Maratzidis admits that decision-makers will closely scrutinize the turnout this weekend.
The Church of Greece has officially discouraged participation in marches, even though it strongly rejects Skoje’s claim.
Its leader Archbishop Ieronymos on Thursday reportedly told Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras that “national unity is needed...(not) protests and shouts.”
A separate protest will be held in the Peloponnese on Saturday, called by a local hard-line bishop.
Ironically, the Macedonia issue threatens to damage the opposition New Democracy conservatives more than Greece’s leftist-led government.
Prominent party cadres, from lawmakers to local mayors, have ignored a tacit order by their liberal-minded leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis to boycott the protests.
It was Mitsotakis’ sister, Dora Bakoyannis, who as foreign minister a decade ago helped to set Greece’s current position on the issue — a composite name, including the word Macedonia, for external and internal use.
If a deal is reached, the compromise name will be put before Greek parliament for approval.
According to media in Macedonia, Nimetz this week proposed five alternatives all containing the name.
Tsipras’ coalition partner Panos Kammenos, who heads the small nationalist ANEL party and holds the defense portfolio, has suggested the name Vardarska, the former Yugoslav province’s name between 1929 and 1941.
Kammenos has ruled out voting for any name containing the word Macedonia — but the government is confident that even if New Democracy is split on the issue, other pro-EU parties in parliament can carry the day.
Koulouri says that the Tsipras administration, which seeks to pull the country out of eight years of economic crisis and dependence on the EU and the International Monetary Fund, “stands only to gain” from a compromise that helps to stabilize the area.
Nicholas Tzifakis, who teaches international relations at the University of the Peloponnese, says that Greece must tread carefully as its EU and NATO partners are losing patience on the issue.
Failure to reach a deal “could work against Greece,” he says.


Palestinian woman hospitalized following seizure in US ICE detention

Updated 9 sec ago
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Palestinian woman hospitalized following seizure in US ICE detention

  • Kordia, a 33-year-old Muslim Palestinian woman living in the US and whose ‌mother is an ‌American citizen, was detained by US immigration ‌authorities ⁠early ​last year

WASHINGTON: A Palestinian woman, who lost dozens of family members in the Gaza war, has ​been hospitalized following a seizure in US immigration detention, the Department of Homeland Security said on Monday.
On February 6, 2026, at about 8:45 p.m., “medical staff at the Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado, Texas, notified ICE that detainee Leqaa Kordia was admitted to Texas Health Huguley Hospital in Burleson, Texas, for further evaluation following a seizure,” a DHS spokesperson said.
Kordia, a 33-year-old Muslim Palestinian woman living in the US and whose ‌mother is an ‌American citizen, was detained by US immigration ‌authorities ⁠early ​last year.
She ‌was detained during a meeting with immigration officials at the Newark Immigration and Customs Enforcement Field Office, where she was accompanied by her attorney. At the time of her detention last year, Kordia was in the process of securing legal residency.
In a weekend statement cited by media, her family and legal team said they have not received communication from US authorities about her ⁠health. The family could not immediately be reached for comment. DHS says ICE will ensure ‌she receives proper medical care.
Rights groups have long ‍reported on detainee complaints about conditions ‍in ICE detention facilities, calling the conditions inhumane. The federal government ‍has denied treating detainees inhumanely.
Amnesty International says 175 members of Kordia’s family have been killed during Israel’s assault on Gaza since late 2023 following an attack by militant group Hamas.
The Homeland Security Department says Kordia, who was raised in the ​Israeli-occupied West Bank, was arrested for immigration violations related to overstaying her expired student visa. The DHS also says she was ⁠arrested by local authorities in 2024 during pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia University that the department cast as being supportive of Hamas.
Kordia and other protesters, including some Jewish groups, say the government wrongly equates criticism of Israel’s assault on Gaza and its occupation of Palestinian territories with antisemitism, and advocacy for Palestinian rights with support for extremism.
Kordia has said she was targeted for pro-Palestinian activism and cast the conditions in her detention facility as “filthy, overcrowded and inhumane.”
President Donald Trump’s administration cracked down on pro-Palestinian protests by threatening to freeze federal funds for universities where protests occurred and by attempting to deport ‌foreign protesters. It has faced legal obstacles while rights advocates say the crackdown hurts free speech and lacks due process.