SKOPJE: Voters across the Balkan state of Macedonia will decide Sunday whether to re-name their country North Macedonia, an emotional vote that could end a bitter row with Greece and unlock a path to NATO and the EU.
It is a loaded question for many in the nation of around 2.1 million, which has tussled with Greece for 27 years over its name and history.
Athens objects to its northern neighbour’s name because it has its own province called Macedonia.
It accuses Skopje of encroaching on its territory and cultural heritage.
In protest Greece has used its veto to thwart Macedonia’s progress in NATO and EU accession talks.
But in June the two neighbours reached a compromise: the Republic of North Macedonia.
Now Macedonians are being called on to approve the name, despite a widespread feeling that they have been pushed around by Greece.
Prime Minister Zoran Zaev is selling the name-change as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the poor country to move past the row and integrate with the West.
He has the backing of a host of European and US leaders who have trotted through Skopje this month to shore up support.
“You know well that a better deal cannot be made,” Zaev told a crowd this week in one of his final campaign events.
Some Macedonians say they are willing to vote “yes” in the hope that NATO and EU membership will inject life into a flat economy ravaged by emigration.
“We won’t ever have a chance for a better future for Macedonia,” said Bogdana Zabrcanec, a resident of the central city of Prilep who came to listen to Zaev speak this week.
But even if voters approve the name change, the deal will still need to be ratified in parliament, where a right-wing opposition threatens to block it.
Zaev is hoping a strong majority for “yes” will make it difficult for the nationalist VMRO-DPMNE party to resist the public’s will.
But turnout figures could prove contentious.
If less than half of the 1.8 million registered voters cast ballots, detractors may attack the referendum’s credibility.
That turnout figure could be hard to reach in a country where a quarter of the population is estimated to have emigrated abroad.
So far, the boycott movement has been mostly limited to online activities. A planned rally on Thursday night was cancelled, with only several dozen people showing up.