Independence and controversy
In 1991, Yugoslav Macedonia seceded from Yugoslavia, declaring its independence as the Republic of Macedonia. The issue of Macedonia became a heated political issue in Greece, where huge demonstrations took place in Athens and Thessaloniki in 1992 against the new state, under the slogan "Macedonia is Greece." The Greek government objected to the use of the name Macedonia, and also to the use of symbols such as the Star of Vergina. Greece imposed an economic blockade on the new state and also blocked European Union recognition and economic aid.
As a result of the dispute, the new state was admitted into the United Nations in 1993 under the temporary name "Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" (or FYROM for short) while it continued to use Republic of Macedonia as its constitutional name. Outside Greece, the country is usually simply called "Macedonia". A number of countries have recognised it by its constitutional name.
In 1995 Greece and Macedonia came to an agreement whereby Macedonia agreed to remove any implied territorial claims to the greater Macedonia region from its constitution and to drop the Star of Vergina from its flag. Discussions continue over the country's name, but without any resolution so far.
Many Greeks also object to the use of the term "ethnic Macedonians" to describe the Slav minority in northern Greece, and some also to such use to describe the Slav majority in the republic to the north. Greece argues that this usage is inaccurate as Macedonia is in fact inhabited by a number of different peoples - Slavs, Greeks, Vlachs and Albanians, none of whom has a historically exclusive claim to the term. The term is, however, widely used outside Greece to mean the Slav inhabitants of both Republic of Macedonia and of northern Greece.
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