BULGARIA RENEWS TIES WITH ARAB WORLD

Views on BG | August 27, 2001, Monday // 00:00

The Times of India

Bulgaria took a first step towards improving links with the Arab world this weekend as Jordan’s King Abdullah II wrapped up an official visit.

The Jordanian monarch’s visit was the first by an Arab head of state since the fall of communism in Bulgaria in 1989, when the country still enjoyed strong ties with the Arab countries. `The visit by Abdullah II will give a strong boost to the development of bilateral ties and the development of Bulgaria`s relations with the rest of the Arab world, ` President Petar Stoyanov said on Saturday. Abdullah said he too favoured strengthening ties between Jordan and Bulgaria.

During the 24-hour visit, Abdullah and Stoyanov signed three agreements pledging bilateral cooperation on health; air links; and education, science and culture. Abdullah also met Bulgaria`s former monarch and current Prime Minister, Simeon Saxe-Coburg, who speaks Arabic and has close ties with the Jordanian and Moroccan royal families. Saxe-Coburg went to school with Abdullah`s father, the late King Hussein, and Hassan II, the late king of Morocco, after being expelled from his country in 1946 when Bulgarians scrapped the monarchy to become a republic. In 1991, the post-communist government cut all ties with the region, saying that it refused to have contacts with `terrorist regimes.` After a period of stagnation that has lasted close to 10 years, we hope to see bilateral relations renewed. Jordan could become a gateway for Bulgaria to the Arab world,` said Hassan Al Barmawi, president of the Bulgarian-Jordan Chamber of Economic Cooperation. During the communist era, Bulgaria had strong ties with the Arab countries, selling them arms and buying their oil. Libya, Iran and Iraq were Sofia`s top three economic partners in the developing world. In those days trade with the region was worth over two billion dollars (2.19 billion euros) a year.

Last year that trade amounted to only 160 million dollars, according to the Bulgarian Institute of Statistics. Bulgaria`s trade with Jordan was worth 17 million dollars in 2000, compared to 44 million dollars 10 years ago. Bulgaria`s poor links with the Arab world came into the national spotlight in February 1991, when Libya began legal proceedings against six Bulgarians accused of deliberately infecting Libyan children with the HIV virus. The six could face the death penalty if found guilty. `Nobody in Bulgaria believes that the Bulgarian doctor and nurses could be capable of the horrible crime they are accused of,` Stoyanov said Saturday. Senior Bulgarian ministers have made several visits to Arab countries in recent months. Stoyanov travelled to Syria and Libya in March, where he signed a dozen accords pledging economic and security cooperation. The prime minister and foreign minister of the former conservative government both visited Egypt last year and Stoyanov went to Damas in June 2000 after the death of Syria`s President Hafezal-Assad. After leaving Bulgaria, Abdullah was scheduled to travel to Russia for a three-day visit.

We need your support so Novinite.com can keep delivering news and information about Bulgaria! Thank you!

Views on BG » Be a reporter: Write and send your article

Advertisement
Advertisement
Bulgaria news Novinite.com (Sofia News Agency - www.sofianewsagency.com) is unique with being a real time news provider in English that informs its readers about the latest Bulgarian news. The editorial staff also publishes a daily online newspaper "Sofia Morning News." Novinite.com (Sofia News Agency - www.sofianewsagency.com) and Sofia Morning News publish the latest economic, political and cultural news that take place in Bulgaria. Foreign media analysis on Bulgaria and World News in Brief are also part of the web site and the online newspaper. News Bulgaria