Bulgaria’s Workforce Hits 3.7 Million as Productivity Sees Modest Gains
Preliminary data from the National Statistical Institute (NSI) show that Bulgaria employed 3,726,500 people in the third quarter of 2025
Bulgaria's President Rumen Radev (left) and North Macedonia's President Stevo Pendarovski (right)
The President of the Republic of North Macedonia, Stevo Pendarovski, stated that in the last two years, he has not had a single constructive conversation with his Bulgarian colleague, Rumen Radev.
In front of Sitel TV, Pendarovski defined the opening of Bulgarian clubs in the country "as an organized provocation" by Sofia and pointed out that in the history of the European Union there was no such blockade as Sofia applies to Skopje with the words: "You are not the one who you think you are".
According to him, because of the opening of the Bulgarian clubs, the dissatisfaction of the people in North Macedonia against the so-called "French proposal" has increased.
On the occasion of the reactions that his words evoke in Bulgaria, Pendarovski stated that the reaction in our country is not important to him, but that of the Macedonian people and citizens.
From his words, it became clear that the working group for changes in the Constitution was created with the aim of clarifying the arguments between the opposition and the rulers, and the consultation process was supposed to last several months.
Follow Novinite.com on Twitter and Facebook
Write to us at editors@novinite.com
Информирайте се на Български - Novinite.bg
/Bulgarian National Television
Storm Byron has caused significant disruption across southern Greece
The district prosecutor's office in Varaždin, northern Croatia, has formally charged a father and son with orchestrating the production of over 1.3 million counterfeit COVID-19 tests
The entire leadership of North Macedonia’s opposition party SDSM has stepped down, following a request from the party’s chairman
Several thousand people gathered in Croatia’s capital, Zagreb, on Sunday for an anti-fascist march aimed at countering the country’s rising far-right sentiment and efforts to revise the history of World War II
North Macedonia’s Prime Minister, Hristijan Mickoski, dismissed the assault on Bulgarian journalist Vladimir Perev as an act of self-inflicted harm
The Bulgarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has not received any official confirmation from Serbian authorities concerning the alleged “arrest of Bulgarian spies” or the “dismantling of a Bulgarian spy network” in Serbia
Bulgaria's Strategic Role in the EU's Drone Wall Defense Initiative
When Politics Means Violence