The Fight Against Libyan Extremists Goes Through... Bulgaria?
Yes, the Pentagon is considering the deployment of U.S. forces to the eastern European country to train Libyan troops, possibly as soon as next year.
HOT: » Assessing the Legacy of Bulgaria's "Denkov" Cabinet: Achievements, Failures, and What Comes Next
Yes, the Pentagon is considering the deployment of U.S. forces to the eastern European country to train Libyan troops, possibly as soon as next year.
Former pop musician Yank Barry is teaming up with celeb boxers, aiming to knock out hunger and homelessness among Syrian refugees, while Jewish group Shalom offers medical care
Khaled stayed in Syria until the last possible moment.
MILEN GEORGIEV'S father had bought him a kit of cheap magic tricks. That was lucky, because it helped the young Bulgarian figure out the sleight-of-hand in the hustlers' three-card con trick at an open-air market in Sofia.
from The Independent
Bulgaria plans to tap international bond markets next year for the first time since 2012 to repay maturing debt, Prime Minister Plamen Oresharski said, pledging to resist protests demanding his resignation.
That Bulgaria’s Jewish population in World War II was saved from Hitler’s extermination camps could be considered a miracle, but it shouldn’t be.
This is not the safe heaven Ali was expecting.
Protesters have clashed with riot police outside the the Bulgarian parliament in Sofia.
SOFIA, Bulgaria — Judging by the ferocity of the bear hug a middle-aged cleaning lady gives Ivaylo Dinev, she isn't troubled by the extra work created by the hundreds of students living, eating and sleeping in Sofia University's lecture halls for the past
University students have tried to blockade politicians inside the Bulgarian parliament in Sofia as part of an ongoing protest against alleged corruption and the way the country is run.
Scuffles have broken out as riot police pushed back anti-government protesters trying to block off parliament in the Bulgarian capital Sofia.
Students chained and padlocked doors at Bulgaria’s largest university on Monday as demonstrators reignited protests against official corruption and disarray just six months after the current Socialist-led Bulgarian government took office.
Students in the Bulgarian capital Sofia have chained the doors of the country's biggest university as anti-government unrest continues.
Bulgarian students found the gates of Sofia University padlocked and chained shut on Monday morning after thousands marched in downtown Sofia on Sunday to complain that Bulgaria was still not stable, prosperous or well governed, exactly 24 years after the
Paris ’68. Vietnam War. Tienanmen, 1989. Quebec, 2012. And now, post-communist Bulgaria, 2013.
Thousands rally in capital Sofia calling for government to resign and end to "reign of oligarchy".
Ninety Bulgarian university professors and teachers Thursday gave support to their students and said the left-leaning, Socialist Party-led government is using “arm-twisting” and “totalitarian” tendencies to try and snuff out criticism from students.
The young men and women milling around the halls of the occupied Sofia University know exactly who they seek to emulate. Under the heading “1968”, a banner painted in the bold red and green of the Bulgarian flag unfurls from a second floor window.
Thousands of students in Bulgaria have brought universities to a standstill over the past two weeks, to demand the resignation of the country’s government, which they claim is corrupt.
from EurActiv
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