Sat, May 26 2012
Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov
Photo: Nadezhda Chipeva
Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov said decision on whether to extend contract with the consultancy firm would be made shortly.
The British consultancy firm was put in the spotlight by Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov’s decision to declassify two of its contracts
Bulgarians might be led to think that they have not been getting value for money from the Customs Agency and from the large sums paid from the public purse to UK consultancy firm Crown Agents, hired to advise on customs reforms.
British ambassador to Bulgaria Steve Williams hosted a reception on the occasion of consultancy firm Crown Agents’ seventh year of working with Bulgaria’s Customs Agency and Finance Ministry
For months if not all the recent years, headlines about Bulgaria's Customs Agency have been monotonously positive. Not long ago, one Bulgarian-language financial daily reported the latest figures on revenues earned through Customs with a headline along the lines of "Yet another record by the Customs Agency". The yawn as fingers hit the keyboard was almost audible. Admittedly, regularly reading that
UK consultancy firm Crown Agents said on January 18 that it had helped Bulgaria's customs reach record high revenues. Crown Agents helped Bulgaria boost its customs revenue by about a billion leva in each of the past two years, reaching an estimated 5.3 billion leva in 2005, the company's management told a news conference.
The funding is provided under the foreign military sales programme of the US army's Program Executive Office of Simulation, Training and Instrumentation.
The UK nationals were arrested after throwing beer bottles at people after being refused entry to a restaurant that had closed for the night.
Restoration and development projects include Madara Horseman, Arbanassi fortress, Magura cave.
Simeon Saxe-Coburg and his spouse Margarita opened a new heating and insulation system at the Tsar Ferdinand Hospital for Pulmonary Diseases in Iskrets, a project implemented thanks to the Embassy of the Sovereign Order of Malta in Sofia and the Nando Peretti Foundation.
According to the law's provisions, the commission will have the power to investigate individuals without prior notification and would not require a criminal conviction in order to launch an investigation.
Good riddance
"about who were the masterminds that benefited the most from corruption in the customs system".
Shouldn't they ask this question to customs management...??!