Euractiv: Sofia tells Skopje to stick to constitutional change commitment
- The new Bulgarian government has announced that it refuses to negotiate with North Macedonia to soften the conditions under which Skopje can start EU accession negotiations, Euractiv reports.

Brussels, 10 February 2024 (MIA) - The new Bulgarian government has announced that it refuses to negotiate with North Macedonia to soften the conditions under which Skopje can start EU accession negotiations, Euractiv reports.
“Three years ago, Bulgaria and North Macedonia reached an agreement, mediated by France, on mutual concessions that would unblock the process of European integration in the Western Balkans. The government in Skopje agreed to include the Bulgarian minority in its constitution, and the authorities in Sofia promised to lift the veto on the start of negotiations with North Macedonia,” the article published Monday states.
Euractiv notes that in early 2024, “the right-wing nationalist party VMRO-DMPNE came to power, and the party leader Hristijan Mickoski became prime minister” promising not to make concessions to Sofia.
“Mickoski claimed that he was waiting for the election of a regular government in Sofia to begin negotiations to lift the Bulgarian veto, but the first signals are that the dialogue will not be renewed. Bulgaria reminds that the inclusion of the Bulgarian minority in the constitution of North Macedonia is not a bilateral problem, but is already a condition of Brussels towards Skopje,” states the article.
The article cites a Bulgarian minister stating that Bulgaria remains “extremely consistent” in its policy towards the Western Balkans and the European integration of all countries in the region.
“There is a European consensus, as it is known in Bulgaria - the French proposal, which will be strictly followed. What was reached as an agreement is not a bilateral problem between Sofia and Skopje, it is between Brussels and our neighbours from the Republic of North Macedonia,” the Minister says.
In the article, Euractiv notes VMRO-DPMNE's insistence that the constitutional changes be adopted but enter into force after North Macedonia joins the EU to prevent the risk of Bulgaria imposing a new veto on other grounds.
It adds that Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski has requested meetings with representatives of the Bulgarian government.
“In the past, we have already had meetings with the Bulgarian leadership at the highest level and their then caretaker prime minister. I expect that in the next period there will be meetings with the Bulgarian government at various levels and this should not surprise us. Neither we will disappear, nor will they disappear, we will still be neighbours. We need to build good neighbourly relations, but this does not mean that we agree on some topics that divide us,” PM Mickoski says in the statement cited by Euractiv.
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