Politicians injured in fist fight as Macedonia parliament stormed

Protesters break into parliament and attack members after ethnic Albanian elected speaker

Protesters storm the Macedonian parliament in Skopje on Thursday after ethnic Albanian  Talat Xhaferi was elected speaker. Photograph: Maja Zlatecska/EPA
Protesters storm the Macedonian parliament in Skopje on Thursday after ethnic Albanian Talat Xhaferi was elected speaker. Photograph: Maja Zlatecska/EPA

Protesters stormed into Macedonia’s parliament and the leader of the Social Democrats was injured in a fistfight on Thursday after his party and ethnic Albanian allies voted to elect an Albanian as parliament speaker, witnesses said.

Live television footage showed Zoran Zaev with blood trickling from the left side of his forehead, not long after he announced that the majority coalition led by his party had elected Talat Xhaferi as parliament speaker.

A Reuters witness saw nationalist protesters angered over Xhaferi’s election beating up another lawmaker in parliament, and broken glass was strewn about the floor.

Mr Zaev had told reporters earlier: “With 67 votes we have elected a new parliament speaker. I want to congratulate Talat Xhaferi and good luck to all of us.”

READ SOME MORE

Mr Xhaferi became the first ethnic Albanian parliament speaker in Macedonia since the small Balkan country won independence from then-Yugoslavia in 1991.

Macedonia went to the brink of civil war during an insurgency by minority Albanians in 2001 before international mediation defused the situation, but ethnic tensions linger.

MPs with the nationalist VMRO-DPMNE party 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.

The coalition pact between the Social Democrats and two parties representing ethnic Albanians has triggered daily street protests in Skopje. Ethnic Albanians comprise a third of the population in Macedonia.

The impoverished country plunged into political turmoil two years ago over a wiretapping scandal that brought down a government led by the VMRO-DPMNE.

Elections were held in December 2016 but no government has been formed yet, though Mr Zaev forged a majority coalition in parliament together with ethnic Albanians.

Reuters