The Montenegrin parliament, which met today in Chetinyi, the historic capital, approved the country's admission to NATO, moving on to the latest action that had to be taken to advance its entry into the North Atlantic Alliance.
Montenegro hopes it will be able to formally join NATO at the summit due in May in Brussels. Until then, two other countries, Spain and the Netherlands, should also approve the treaty adopted today by Montenegrin deputies. The Secretary-General of the Ged Stöltenberg Alliance will then send Montenegro the formal invitation to join.
Opposition MPs, boycotting the work of the parliament, did not attend this meeting. At the same time, some 200 supporters of the Democratic Front (FD), the opposition, pro-Russian party, demonstrated in Chetinyi against the country's accession to NATO. "We will not recognize the decision of the parliament, your hands are dipped in the blood, raising your hand (voted in favor) to NATO, you are once again bombarding Montenegro, Serbia ... This is an act of betrayal "Said Milan Knezevic, one of the FD leaders. Protesters also burned a NATO flag and shouted slogans against MPs who entered the parliament building, calling them "thieves," "traitors," and "murderers."
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