Fri, Feb 10 2012
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We are working well together, Bulgarian leaders and senior Olaf official say, while PM Borissov warns that every signal from the EU anti-fraud office will be followed up.
Boiko Borissov brings half of his Cabinet with him on a mission to dazzle EU institutions
The new administration of Bulgaria's agriculture ministry plans to apply for technical assistance to help farmers comply with European requirements through special coaching. A paltry 3000 farms have so far met the criteria and supply quality milk to dairies.
There is no risk of Bulgaria losing EU funds as long as it does its job, the EC says
Former head of the fund's communications working-group with European Union and Olaf appointed head of the Agriculture Fund.
The European anti-fraud office agreed to give Bulgarian authorities three months to investigate allegations that 42 meat and milk processing firms embezzled European Union funds
The news that companies with a spotless reputation have turned up on the new list of Sapard-funding violators shocked representatives of the meat and milk processing industries.
The European Commission (EC) has added 98 new projects financed under its Sapard programme to the debtors list, demanding that the country returns 65 million leva.
Bulgaria was likely to lose 130 million leva in funds allocated under the European Union's pre-accession aid programme Sapard for 2008.
Bulgarian prosecutors were investigating more cases of alleged embezzlement of European Union funds by companies linked to controversial businessmen Mario Nikolov and Lyudmil Stoykov.
Businessman Martin Dipchev, accused of writing up his expenses on a project financed under EU's pre-accession aid Sapard programme by more than 600 000 leva, will pay a paltry fine of 2500 leva, Plovdiv District Court ruled on January 12, as reported by website mediapool.bg. The administrative punishment was imposed for the use of false paperwork in submitting the application to the Sapard payments agency, the court ruled.
The discovery was made after some of the land in a complex near Bourgas was washed away by rough seas.
No trains could cross the Danube Bridge and passengers from international trains were being taken to the city of Rousse by road transport.
Hazardous weather warnings across the country on February 9, new record-low temperatures, and three people reported frozen to death in Pernik.
Opposition parties and environmental protection NGOs argued that this and other provisions were the result of lobbyist pressure from ski resort operators.
Ferry-boat service between the Bulgarian and Romanian banks of the river may continue if the ferry captains decide that the weather conditions allow the safe passage of the boats.
Wonderful! So, we are not corrupt anymore?
What bulshit... It's all about energy politics and Stanishev's Russian projects.
Boyko meets with Putin, shows him his empty (tied up) hands and magically we aren't nearly as corrupt as we used to be...