Violence erupts as protesters storm Macedonia parliament
Protesters stormed into Macedonia's parliament and assaulted the leader of the Social Democrats after his party and ethnic Albanian allies voted to elect an Albanian as parliament speaker.
Macedonia's opposition leader was among nearly 10 people injured in parliament after protesters stormed the building when an ethnic Albanian was elected as the speaker of parliament.
Violence erupted after protesters supporting the rival Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization – Democratic Party for Macedonian National Unity (VMRO-DPMNE), entered parliament waving Macedonian flags and singing the national anthem.
Macedonian police fired stun grenades to disperse protesters outside the parliament and clear the way for the evacuation of lawmakers still in the building.
Live television footage showed Social Democratic leader Zoran Zaev with blood trickling from one side of his forehead, not long after he announced that the majority coalition led by his party had elected Talat Xhaferi as parliament speaker.
Shortly before protesters charged into parliament, Zaev told reporters, "With 67 votes we have elected a new parliament speaker. I want to congratulate Talat Xhaferi and good luck to all of us."
Xhaferi became the first ethnic Albanian parliament speaker in Macedonia since the small Balkan country won independence from then-Yugoslavia in 1991.
Witnesses saw nationalist protesters angered over Xhaferi's election beating up another lawmaker in parliament. Broken glass littered the floor and traces of blood were seen in hallways.
Some of the roughly 200 protesters inside the parliament were masked. Witnesses said that police entered parliament after the disturbances erupted but did not immediately seek to quell the protesters.
Police said eight people including an ethnic Albanian lawmaker were injured in the violence.
TRT World spoke to Uraniya Pirovska, who is President of the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Macedonia, about the situation in the capital Skopje.
Political deadlock
President Gjorge Ivanov invited leaders of all political parties for a meeting in his office on Friday.
Ivanov refused to give mandate to Zaev who has forged the coalition with ethnic Albanian parties to form the government saying it threatened the sovereignty of Macedonia.
Ethnic Albanians comprise a third of the country's population.
Macedonia has been without a functioning government since 2015 when the country sank into political turmoil over a wiretapping scandal that brought down the ruling nationalist VMRO-DPMNE party bloc.
Elections were held in December 2016 but no government has been formed yet.
Zaev's parliamentary alliance has triggered daily street protests by Macedonian nationalists in Skopje.
VMRO-DPMNE lawmakers challenged the legality of Thursday's vote, saying it was not carried out electronically as is the usual case because the parliamentary session had formally ended.
EU response
The current crisis is the worst since 2001 when Western diplomacy helped drag the country of 2.1 million people back from the brink of civil war during an ethnic Albanian insurgency, promising it a route to membership of the EU and NATO.
But Macedonia has made little progress in that direction due to a name dispute with Greece..
EU commissioner for enlargement, Johannes Hahn condemned the attacks.
I condemn the attacks on MPs in #Skopje in the strongest terms. Violence has NO place in Parliament. Democracy must run its course. @eu_near
— Johannes Hahn (@JHahnEU) April 27, 2017
EU's foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini called for "calm and restraint".
"The acts of violence in the Parliament are wholly unacceptable," Mogherini said in a statement
"This is the time for dialogue and not for violence," Mats Staffansson, Sweden's ambassador to Skopje, told reporters on behalf of EU and US legations in Macedonia.