Open this photo in gallery New Democracy party leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis addresses lawmakers during a parliamentary session where he submitted a motion of no confidence against Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, in Athens, on June 14, 2018. Petros Giannakouris/The Associated Press

The Greek parliament began debating a no-confidence motion in the government on Thursday, with opposition lawmakers furious over Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s deal aimed at solving a decades-old dispute with neighbouring Macedonia over its name.

Tsipras and Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev reached a landmark agreement on Tuesday to call the ex-Yugoslav republic the “Republic of North Macedonia”, settling nearly three decades of wrangling over its name and removing an obstacle to Skopje’s bid to join the European Union and NATO.

But in a reflection of the depth of feeling over the issue, both Zaev and Tsipras were accused in their home countries of “national capitulation”. The issue has triggered mass protests both in Skopje and Athens in previous months.

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The Macedonian president has said he would try to block the deal, and in Greece, the opposition initiated a censure motion against the government, a first since Tsipras came to power in 2015.

He is trailing in opinion polls, hurt by the economic reforms introduced as a condition for a third multibillion-euro bailout for Greece in 2015.

The no-confidence motion, submitted by the opposition New Democracy, said the accord was the final blow for Greeks who have suffered years of austerity.

“This is a damaging agreement to our national interests,” the motion said. “It is a major national concession which cannot be tolerated.”

Around 2,000 protesters gathered in Skopje on Wednesday in support of Macedonian President Gjorge Ivanov who said he would block a deal with Greece on changing his country's name. Reuters

Tsipras’s governing left-right coalition has 154 seats in the 300-member parliament, so the government is unlikely to fall. If parliament were to back the no confidence motion Tsipras would have to hand over his mandate to the country’s president.

His coalition ally, the Independent Greeks, have said publicly they would not support the accord reached with Skopje but would not topple the government, either.

The debate was expected to wrap up on Saturday. Protests were scheduled outside parliament on Saturday night, although demonstrations in central Athens were also expected on Friday.

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Under the deal, Macedonia would become formally known as “the Republic of North Macedonia”. It is currently known officially at the United Nations as the ‘Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia’.

The deal still requires ratification by both national parliaments and by a referendum in Skopje.

“I am compelled, it is my duty, to exhaust every possibility offered in the constitution to avert this development,” New Democracy leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis said.

In another debate earlier, Tsipras shrugged off the no-confidence motion, saying it gave him an opportunity to expose the see-saw tactics of New Democracy, whom he blamed for a series of blunders on the issue when it was in government.

“What goes around comes around,” Tsipras said.

Athens has long objected to its northern neighbour’s use of the name ‘Macedonia’, saying it implies territorial claims on a northern Greek province of the same name and amounts to the appropriation of Greece’s ancient cultural heritage.