SOFIA, Bulgaria — It's not easy to plan your future in a region like the Balkans, where history often clouds the present.
One of Europe's youngest nations, North Macedonia, spent years resolving differences with Greece that prevented it joining the European Union and NATO. This week, that path was blocked again, this time by another neighbor, Bulgaria.
The government in Sofia wants North Macedonia to formally recognize that its language has Bulgarian roots and to stamp out what it says is anti-Bulgarian rhetoric.
Launching accession talks with a prospective member country requires unanimous approval from all 27 EU nations. Foreign Minister Ekaterina Zaharieva told Bulgaria's lawmakers that their country withheld its consent Tuesday because North Macedonia was not observing a 2017 bilateral friendship treaty and was fueling hatred through some of its policies.
"Hysteria has been whipped up in their media, fueled by open hate speech toward Bulgaria, and by branding anyone who expresses a dissenting opinion a traitor," Zaharieva said.
"In effect, Skopje has continued its policy of maintaining unfounded claims about minority rights, history and language, among other matters," Zaharieva said.
Bulgaria insists that instead of "Macedonian language" the formulation "the official language of the Republic of North Macedonia" should be used in the negotiating framework.
Sofia considers the language a dialect of Bulgarian, arguing that the official language of its neighbor was artificially created after 1944.