Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Lyubcho Georgievski compares the Bundestag's decision on North Macedonia to an act of the Comintern

Lyubcho Georgievski
Photo: BGNES - archive

According to former Macedonian Prime Minister Lyubcho Georgievski, the Bundestag's decision on Macedonian identity, language and culture is equivalent in format, content and international weight to that of the 1934 Comintern. In his commentary posted on Facebook, he also recalls that similar acts were characteristic of Tito's Yugoslavia and Georgi Dimitrov's Bulgaria. 
Georgievski, who also has Bulgarian citizenship, adds that "not even the Germans themselves", the English, French, Italians, Americans or Canadians can "boast of" such documents. "Now I cannot help but be surprised at the belittling and ignoring of the resolution by all the defenders of the Macedonian identity. Suddenly it turned out that it does not matter? It seems that to be a true Macedonian you have to hate Bulgarians 100%, even to your own detriment," Georgievski writes.



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Georgi Ivanov (R) and Nikolai Rukavishnikov.

46 years ago today: Georgi Ivanov became the first Bulgarian cosmonaut

On this day 46 years ago, Georgi Ivanov made history as the first Bulgarian to go into space.   On 10 April 1979, at 20:34 Moscow time, the Soyuz-33 spacecraft was launched into orbit with Georgi Ivanov and Soviet commander Nikolai Rukavishnikov on..

published on 4/10/25 1:29 PM
Kostadin Kostadinov

MECH files vote of no confidence in the government

The MECH party is filing a motion of no confidence against the government, the leader of Vazrazhdane, Kostadin Kostadinov said on the sidelines of the National Assembly. The MP said that it was organized by his political force, which..

published on 4/10/25 11:25 AM

Maximum speed on highways to become 130 km/h

Drivers should drive with a maximum speed of 130 km/h on highways, which is ten less than the current permitted speed, MPs of the parliamentary Committee on Transport decided, adopting the amendments to the Road Traffic Act at first..

published on 4/10/25 9:36 AM