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politburo on July 10 which adopted a motion denouncing the NOF and indirectly the
Macedonian contribution to the war effort; Mitrevski refuted these claims but to no avail. The fits which had occurred between him and Keramitčiev was seen as potentially fatal to the party and he was removed as leader of NOF on August 8, 1948. Stavros Kochopoulos officially became president while
199:". He was transferred to Moscow, where in 1952 he was sentenced by the Supreme Court of the USSR to 25 years in prison. But in the spring of 1956 he was released, and the following year his sentence was annulled. During 1957 he left for Communist Yugoslavia. On June 26, 1963, he was elected as a judge of the newly established Constitutional Court of
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become leader of the party rather than
Mihajlo Keramitčiev, who had the support of rival factions. Soon mistrust and suspicion grew about Mitrevski's role in NOF and the Communist Party. Many claimed that he was "motivated solely by his own personal ambitions". He attended the general meeting of the
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Mitrevski was a staunch supporter of the NOF and criticised the regional leadership of the KKE. Eventually a rift occurred between
Mitrevski and Mihajlo Keramitčiev and many factions of the National Liberation Front were divided. This was in turn over the dismissal of NOF leaders such as
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that the membership of the secretariat should be expanded and
Mitrevski was reinstated. On the initiative of Zachariadis, Mitrevski was reinstated as President of the National Liberation Front on April 1, 1949.
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Four days after his reinstatement as
President of the National Liberation Front on April 5, 1949, Paskal Mitrevski was appointed as the Minister for Food in the Provisional Government along with
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regarding the complete merger of the
Communist Party and the National Liberation Front. This was achieved but the National Liberation Front remained a semi-autonomous entity within the KKE.
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who was appointed as the
Director of National Minorities in the Ministry of the Interior. By mid 1949 only one of the three major factions in the NOF was in support of Mitrevski.
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118:. On September 13, 1946, Mitrevski wrote a letter in which he stated "We did not leave a single issue unresolved or in the dark" in regards to the
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43:
47:
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158:, publicly criticised each other. As it was obvious that the party was in serious internal strife, Mitrevski proposed that
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Rossos, A: Incompatible Allies: Greek
Communism and Macedonian Nationalism in the Civil War in Greece, 1943 - 1949
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of the party on
February 20–21, 1948 where Mitrevski and the leader of the "Anti-Fascist Women's Front"
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and the existence of the
National Liberation Front. By this time Mitrevski had entered talks with
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from the Executive Council by General Ioannidis. In turn this matter was taken to the
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195:, where was arrested on October 3, 1949, on accusations that he was an "agent of
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After the collapse of the Democratic Army of Greece, Mitrevski fled to
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until it was disbanded in 1944. On April 23, 1945, he founded the
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was made secretary. By December, however, it had been decided by
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83:
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EM, 3, no.171, pp.380-83, Mitrovski, Report, September 13, 1946
150:Антифашистички Фронт на Жените, Antifašistički front na Ženite
110:. He soon became the representative of NOF to the
90:or National Liberation Front (NOF) along with
78:Involvement with the National Liberation Front
244:page 268. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, 2002
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263:Slavic-Macedonian National Liberation Front
84:Slavic-Macedonian National Liberation Front
206:He died on February 10, 1978, in Skopje.
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176:Minister in the Provisional Government
258:National Liberation Front (Macedonia)
42:partisan and former President of the
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44:Macedonian National Liberation Front
293:Slavic speakers of Greek Macedonia
242:The Struggle for Greece, 1941-1949
58:Mitrevski was born in 1912 in the
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1:
82:In 1943 Mitrevski joined the
50:after the Second World War.
88:Narodno Osloboditelen Front
46:, founded in Greece by the
30:(1912–1978), also known as
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48:Slavic Macedonian minority
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116:Democratic Army of Greece
25:
298:Macedonian communists
112:Greek Communist Party
70:, today Archangelos,
66:(Chuka), then in the
36:Paschalis Mitropoulos
288:People from Nestorio
132:Vangel Ajanovski-Oče
160:Stavros Kochopoulos
92:Mihajlo Keramitčiev
169:Nikos Zachariadis
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245:
240:Woodhouse, C.M:
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120:Macedonian issue
100:Atanas Korovešov
32:Paskal Mitrovski
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26:Паскал Митревски
17:Paskal Mitrevski
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96:Georgi Urdov
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283:1978 deaths
278:1912 births
182:Krste Kačev
108:Minčo Fotev
62:village of
272:Categories
210:References
146:Macedonian
114:(KKE) and
54:Early life
22:Macedonian
140:Politburo
60:Kastorian
40:communist
252:See also
38:, was a
193:Albania
189:Bureli
72:Greece
197:Tito
134:and
106:and
64:Čuka
34:or
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