Macedonia referendum: Name change vote fails to reach threshold
Macedonia's vote on changing its name to North Macedonia looks to have fallen far short of the turnout required.
Preliminary results show that just over a third of Macedonians voted in the referendum, with 50% needed, BBC reports.
But with 90% of those who took part in favour of the change, the country's prime minister has urged parliament to "confirm the will of the majority".
The vote aimed to end a long-running dispute with Greece, which has its own region called Macedonia.
Athens had agreed to end its objections to Macedonia's EU and Nato membership bids if the change was passed.
Over 85% of votes have been counted so far, but a campaign by some nationalists - including the country's president - to boycott Sunday's referendum seems to have had an impact, with just 36% of eligible voters taking part.
Prime Minister Zoran Zaev threatened to call early elections if parliament did not support the proposal, made non-binding by the poor turnout.
"If, as we all expect, we truly have a big visible, tangible majority for [voting in favour], out of those who voted, then the future is clear," he said after polls closed on Sunday.
"The vote of the MPs in parliament must resolutely be a vote for a responsible acceleration of the processes towards Nato and the European Union."
Macedonia declared independence during the break-up of Yugoslavia in 1991. But Greece objected to its new neighbour's name.
The dispute harks back to ancient history, because both present-day Macedonia and northern Greece were part of a Roman province called Macedonia. And both claim the heritage of Alexander the Great two centuries earlier.
Greece's objections forced the UN to refer to the new country as "the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia".
Athens also vetoed Macedonia's attempt to join Nato in 2008 - and blocked its EU membership ambitions.