Sat, Jul 04 2009
Organisers of vote buying in the elections would be punished with up to three years imprisonment or with probation and a fine of 1 000 to 5 000 leva, according to amendments in the Penal Code.
Bulgaria's Parliament approved the amendments on October 18 2007, mediapool.bg reported.
The amendments were approved by 131 votes in favour and 12 abstentions. None of the members of the Parliament (MP) voted against.
The MPs approved on second reading an ammendment which would see those who sell their votes to be punished with one year in prison or probation, mediapool.bg said. The proposal was approved by 99 votes in favour, 27 against and 14 abstentions.
Until now, the Penal Code envisioned imprisonment for vote-buying, but the amendments proclaimed criminal vote-selling for the first time.
The first version of the amendments, proposed by ultra-nationalist movement Ataka MP Pavel Shopov, envisioned up to two years in prison for vote-selling.
Ataka and Order Law and Justice parties stage symbolic blockades at Bulgaria’s borders with Turkey on eve of July 5 2009 parliamentary election, while reports record influx of would-be voters and, it is claimed, flights are being chartered from Turkey.
In a blow against a problem that has been plaguing Bulgaria’s elections, State Agency for National Security and Interior Ministry say several people in a ‘major criminal organisation’ have been arrested for vote-buying, on the eve of the July 5 vote.
Barometer Info survey on July 3 2009, just ahead of the eve of Bulgaria’s national parliamentary elections, gives GERB 27.05 per cent and Sergei Stanishev’s Coalition for Bulgaria 19.09 per cent.
The exact number of people sacked from duty out of the 600 who refused to go to work on Monday is undisclosed, although reports claim that as of June 3 at least four people were told they were surplus to requirements.
Open your mind and face the unknown: the 2009 general elections in Bulgaria.