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#northmacedonia — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #northmacedonia, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Dullovi: Albin Kurti is not supporting Albanian students in Macedonia byteseu.com/2024032/ #NorthMacedonia

  2. Bulgaria invited North Macedonia and Serbia to join the Vertical Gas Corridor byteseu.com/2022439/ #NorthMacedonia

  3. Waiting for Godot: Prospects for resolving the Bulgaria–North Macedonia dispute byteseu.com/2021808/ #NorthMacedonia

  4. bytesde.com/1905094/ Heute hat jemand Kam als einen drittklassigen Markt bezeichnet, auf dem Armutsläden einkaufen. Schauen Sie also, es gibt eine schöne Crème Brûlée, die aus Frankreich für die Armen importiert wurde, mit Bourbon-Vanille-Geschmack. #Macedonia #Nordmazedonien #NorthMacedonia

  5. More than one in five workers across Europe — 21.3% — are regularly shifted on Saturdays and Sundays, according to the latest Eurostat data.

    And in some countries, the average is well above that, especially across the #Balkans and the #Mediterranean.

    In Greece, a striking 41% of employees and self-employed workers are active on the weekend, 33% in #Bosnia-Herzegovina, and 32% #Malta, Cyprus and North Macedonia.

    At the same time, the continent's north and east show much lower rates. In #Lithuania, only 4% of workers work on weekends, as do 7% in #Hungary and 7.5% in #Poland.

    When it comes to employees only, Greece, #Cyprus, and #NorthMacedonia remain in the top spots with rates above 30%, followed by #Switzerland and Malta, just below at 29%.

    On the self-employed/employers' front, #Greece again shows the highest rate with an astonishing 75%. The picture changes slightly in the lower spots, occupied here by #Belgium (66%) and #France (60%).

    Working often on weekends doesn't necessarily mean working more overall. In Greece's case, however, the numbers are consistent with other #Eurostat data showing Greeks tend to work more hours than anyone else in the EU.
    euronews.com/my-europe/2026/05

    #capitalism #burnout #liberalism #classwar

  6. More than one in five workers across Europe — 21.3% — are regularly shifted on Saturdays and Sundays, according to the latest Eurostat data.

    And in some countries, the average is well above that, especially across the #Balkans and the #Mediterranean.

    In Greece, a striking 41% of employees and self-employed workers are active on the weekend, 33% in #Bosnia-Herzegovina, and 32% #Malta, Cyprus and North Macedonia.

    At the same time, the continent's north and east show much lower rates. In #Lithuania, only 4% of workers work on weekends, as do 7% in #Hungary and 7.5% in #Poland.

    When it comes to employees only, Greece, #Cyprus, and #NorthMacedonia remain in the top spots with rates above 30%, followed by #Switzerland and Malta, just below at 29%.

    On the self-employed/employers' front, #Greece again shows the highest rate with an astonishing 75%. The picture changes slightly in the lower spots, occupied here by #Belgium (66%) and #France (60%).

    Working often on weekends doesn't necessarily mean working more overall. In Greece's case, however, the numbers are consistent with other #Eurostat data showing Greeks tend to work more hours than anyone else in the EU.
    euronews.com/my-europe/2026/05

    #capitalism #burnout #liberalism #classwar

  7. More than one in five workers across Europe — 21.3% — are regularly shifted on Saturdays and Sundays, according to the latest Eurostat data.

    And in some countries, the average is well above that, especially across the #Balkans and the #Mediterranean.

    In Greece, a striking 41% of employees and self-employed workers are active on the weekend, 33% in #Bosnia-Herzegovina, and 32% #Malta, Cyprus and North Macedonia.

    At the same time, the continent's north and east show much lower rates. In #Lithuania, only 4% of workers work on weekends, as do 7% in #Hungary and 7.5% in #Poland.

    When it comes to employees only, Greece, #Cyprus, and #NorthMacedonia remain in the top spots with rates above 30%, followed by #Switzerland and Malta, just below at 29%.

    On the self-employed/employers' front, #Greece again shows the highest rate with an astonishing 75%. The picture changes slightly in the lower spots, occupied here by #Belgium (66%) and #France (60%).

    Working often on weekends doesn't necessarily mean working more overall. In Greece's case, however, the numbers are consistent with other #Eurostat data showing Greeks tend to work more hours than anyone else in the EU.
    euronews.com/my-europe/2026/05

    #capitalism #burnout #liberalism #classwar

  8. More than one in five workers across Europe — 21.3% — are regularly shifted on Saturdays and Sundays, according to the latest Eurostat data.

    And in some countries, the average is well above that, especially across the #Balkans and the #Mediterranean.

    In Greece, a striking 41% of employees and self-employed workers are active on the weekend, 33% in #Bosnia-Herzegovina, and 32% #Malta, Cyprus and North Macedonia.

    At the same time, the continent's north and east show much lower rates. In #Lithuania, only 4% of workers work on weekends, as do 7% in #Hungary and 7.5% in #Poland.

    When it comes to employees only, Greece, #Cyprus, and #NorthMacedonia remain in the top spots with rates above 30%, followed by #Switzerland and Malta, just below at 29%.

    On the self-employed/employers' front, #Greece again shows the highest rate with an astonishing 75%. The picture changes slightly in the lower spots, occupied here by #Belgium (66%) and #France (60%).

    Working often on weekends doesn't necessarily mean working more overall. In Greece's case, however, the numbers are consistent with other #Eurostat data showing Greeks tend to work more hours than anyone else in the EU.
    euronews.com/my-europe/2026/05

    #capitalism #burnout #liberalism #classwar

  9. More than one in five workers across Europe — 21.3% — are regularly shifted on Saturdays and Sundays, according to the latest Eurostat data.

    And in some countries, the average is well above that, especially across the #Balkans and the #Mediterranean.

    In Greece, a striking 41% of employees and self-employed workers are active on the weekend, 33% in #Bosnia-Herzegovina, and 32% #Malta, Cyprus and North Macedonia.

    At the same time, the continent's north and east show much lower rates. In #Lithuania, only 4% of workers work on weekends, as do 7% in #Hungary and 7.5% in #Poland.

    When it comes to employees only, Greece, #Cyprus, and #NorthMacedonia remain in the top spots with rates above 30%, followed by #Switzerland and Malta, just below at 29%.

    On the self-employed/employers' front, #Greece again shows the highest rate with an astonishing 75%. The picture changes slightly in the lower spots, occupied here by #Belgium (66%) and #France (60%).

    Working often on weekends doesn't necessarily mean working more overall. In Greece's case, however, the numbers are consistent with other #Eurostat data showing Greeks tend to work more hours than anyone else in the EU.
    euronews.com/my-europe/2026/05

    #capitalism #burnout #liberalism #classwar