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Members of 36 families in Ohrid protested several times during the year, including in June, claiming that authorities had failed to properly compensate them for land parcels nationalized by the state in 1957.


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UNHCR assessed asylum processes continued to improve, and previous concerns regarding a practice of arbitrarily denying access to asylum seekers had been addressed. UNHCR reported, however, that the mechanism for adjudicating refugee status failed to provide basic procedural guarantees and proper determinations as prescribed in the law.

As of August 20, the SLI had received one complaint from the Confederation of Free Trade Unions (KSS) alleging the Ministry of Labor failed to respond to their application to be recognized as a representative union with authority to negotiate branch collective agreements. The ministry reported it denied the KSS application because it failed to demonstrate KSS met the legally required threshold for workforce representation.

On April 1, the country notified the secretary general of the Council of Europe that it would exercise the right to derogate from its obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights. In view of the measures the government took in relation to COVID-19 and the declared state of emergency, the country derogated from Article 8 (right to private and family life), Article 11 (freedom of assembly and association), and Article 2 of Protocol Number 4 (freedom of movement).

Access to Asylum: UNHCR assessed access to asylum practices continued to improve consistently, and previous concerns regarding the practice of arbitrarily denying access to asylum had been addressed. The law provides for granting asylum or refugee status, and the government has established a system to provide protection to refugees. UNHCR reported, however, that the mechanism for adjudicating refugee status failed to provide basic procedural guarantees and proper determinations as prescribed in the law. It reported 181 migrants applied for asylum in the first seven months of the year. Two persons were granted refugee status or a subsidiary form of protection.

The government issued identity documents to recognized refugees and persons under subsidiary protection, but authorities frequently delayed or failed to issue identification documents to new asylum seekers.

In July the Public Revenue Office (PRO) disclosed that hundreds of employers who received financial support from the state to pay salaries during the COVID-19 state of emergency failed to transfer the money to their employees. PRO Director Lukarevska said 281 employers were cited in April and 427 in May. The government published a list of the companies that abused the financial assistance and updated it as employers fulfilled their obligations to their employees.

Jusuf Mujezinovi, born in 1929 in Tuzla in the former Yugoslavia, discusses his family history and his memories of the outbreak of World War II; loudspeakers giving orders to citizens; the treatment of Jews, including forced street cleaning, wearing yellow Star of David badges, and having signs on their shops; a night raid on the Jewish population by the Ustae, resulting in the removal of the area's Jews in 1941; an Ustae attempt to take the Serb population which failed due to the intervention of local leaders; how shootings occurred in prison rather than in public; and how his family was under suspicion because they were communists.

Sakib ati, born in 1926 in Tuzla in the former Yugoslavia, discusses his family history; propaganda of the Ustae and Germans on loudspeakers around the city, including posters of the names of people who were sentenced to death; the treatment of the Jewish population, including the forced wearing of yellow badges; what he knew of Jasenovac; his involvement in a partisan brigade; memories of the violence of the Ustae and Chetniks; specific incidents of people being killed; and meeting with director of the Yugoslavia secret police after the war.

Kosta Rastovac, born in 1922 in Ustica in the former Yugoslavia, describes the sight of bodies in the Sava River in 1941 and 1942; his arrest by the Ustae in 1942; his transfer to Jasenovac; his transfer to Zemun and Staro Sajmiste; the removal of Jews from the camps; his transfer to Norway in 1943 through Kryms, Stargrad, and Szczecin; his placement in camp Bootenn; his transfer to a camp in Polarkreuz; the mass murder of prisoners in different camps by violence, cold, starvation, and disease; liberation by British forces; his transfer to Trondheim; his arrival home in 1945; the effects of Holocaust on his family; and his work after the war for the Yugoslav secret police. e24fc04721

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