Macedonia's fugitive former
premier Nikola Gruevski said Saturday he fled to Hungary despite being
sentenced for abuse of power after he received a threat that he would be
killed in jail.
Gruevski, a former strongman close to
Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban, fled to Budapest in November 2018
to escape the two-year prison sentence, winning asylum there.
In his first interview since fleeing, given to
Macedonia's Sitel television, Gruevski said that at first he intented
to go to jail despite what he labelled "crazy judgements with no legal
basis".
"But... I received information that someone was planning my liquidation in prison.
"Then I changed my decision," Gruevski said.
He said he got information on his planned assassination from "people who were well informed inside prison".
"I cannot say publicly who is behind this plot
because I cannot prove it at the moment. I decided to leave Macedonia
afterwards."
Gruevski ruled Macedonia for nearly a decade
until 2016, when evidence appearing to show a widespread wire-tapping
scheme by his administration led to his downfall.
The former premier has since been the
target of a number of prosecutions and last year was found guilty of
using a luxury government Mercedes for personal travel.
On November 11, Gruevski pulled off a dramatic escape, passing through Albania, Montenegro, and Serbia before reaching Hungary.
Gruevski said Saturday he chose Hungary since
it was a NATO and European Union member as well as a "country with
independent institutions".
After Gruevski fled, a special prosecution
team appointed to probe alleged crimes committed by his administration,
submitted two new charges against him.
He was accused of "illegal financing" of his VMRO-DPMNE party and unlawful construction of its headquarters.
Skopje has demanded Gruevski's immediate return, while the EU is looking to Budapest for answers.