Sat, Jul 04 2009
Bulgarian Parliament decided to support the Prague Declaration that denounces atrocities committed during the years Eastern European countries spent under communism, recognising them equal to the Nazi ones.
The declaration was adopted in Prague on June 3 2008 and called for all parliaments in Europe to support it.
On September 18 2008, a total of 106 MPs out of the 240 in Bulgarian Parliament voted in favour of support the declaration. The motion for the vote was tabled by two of the right-wing parties in opposition - the Union of Democratic Forces and the Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria.
The vote was not entirely backed by the MPs of the three ruling parties - the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP), the National Movement for Stability and Progress and the Movement for Rights and Freedoms. Sixty of the 81 BSP MPs voted against the declaration and five abstained.
They argued that it was about time for the political confrontation to stop and that the 45 years Bulgaria spent under communism were one of the most calm years. BSP is the party that emerger from the Bulgarian Communist Party after the fall of communism in 1989.
In addition to supporting the document, MPs decided to declare August 23 as the day when victims of both Nazi and Communist totalitarian regimes will be commemorated. But the opposition motion to teach pupils about both Nazism and Communism in history textbooks was defeated.
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.