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Segregation of beaches for rich and poor in Bulgaria is unconstitutional - Minister

Wed, Aug 25 2010 16:06 CET 3117 Views 6 Comments
Segregation of beaches for rich and poor in Bulgaria is unconstitutional - Minister

Photo: Oleg Popov

Bulgarian Regional Development Minister Rossen Plevneliev has spoken against a rich-poor divide when it comes to accessing the Bulgarian Black Sea coast.

Access to Bulgarian beaches cannot, and must not, be restricted because such actions are banned by the Bulgarian Constitution, Plevneliev, said.

"Separate beaches for rich and poor will not be. VIP beaches are unconstitutional," he said during a television interview with the private Bulgarian channel bTV on August 25 2010.

Plevneliev commented on recent reports that property owners from the Black Sea resort town of Lozenets have segregated themselves and fenced-off parts of the beach, denying ordinary people access to the seafront. Accordingly, he said the urban plans must be re-evaluated and the cases investigated because the local town hall must secure access to the beach for all tourists.

"Categorically, no one can deny people access to the water," Plevneliev said.

Along the Bulgarian seafront, according to the Minister, there are a total of 209 beaches classified as such; about 100 of them have been already subjected to "surprise investigations" this summer and observed violators will be reported to prosecutors. Plevneliev said that during the investigation, most of the irregularities involved beaches lacking life guards or beaches on concession.

When asked during the interview why the authorities have not yet demolished the illegal construction in the coastal area known as Zlatna Perla, the Minister explained the owners have lodged an appeal with the Supreme Administrative Court.

"At the moment when the court takes the decision – the bulldozers are already there," he said.

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Comments

Anonymous ML Thu, Aug 26 2010 22:44 CET

Anyone up for a mass sit-in by foreigners?

Anonymous 13 Thu, Aug 26 2010 08:56 CET

I think they are talking about "general access" as opposed to "paid access". If you go to TIM rest. on the beach, you have to pay to gain access to the beach area, simple as that (basically saying it is a VIP area).

Rene a constitutional document is general, non specific and all its provisions should be read together.

art 6(2) read with art 18. Read them together and you should get the answer.

Преглед на профил rene Thu, Aug 26 2010 00:06 CET

public access to the beaches is secured in the constitution?
what copy has he been reading?

Anonymous Valeri Wed, Aug 25 2010 23:52 CET

Most of the beaches in France are segregated.
In fact they are separated by the hotel you are staying in (60 EU per family per day) and the public ones are jist a strip of dirt and rocks...

Anonymous Stewart Wed, Aug 25 2010 21:14 CET

Give me a public beach anytime.
Because life is a beach !

Anonymous Mat Wed, Aug 25 2010 18:09 CET

And what about Dune in Sunny Beach? All the legal requirements are in place for its destruction; what's lacking are Rosen's cojones....


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