TikTok Removes 34 Election-Linked Accounts in Bulgaria Amid Manipulation Claims
TikTok has removed 34 accounts linked to what it described as coordinated inauthentic activity connected to Bulgaria’s upcoming parliamentary elections
HOT: » Which party would you vote for (if you could) in the upcoming snap vote in Bulgaria on April 19?
In February, Kasim Dal was expelled from the DPS, the party where he was the second most important man. Photo by BGNES
Supporters of Kasim Dal, a former key figure in the ethnic Turkish DPS party, and the United People's Party of MP, Maria Kapon, announced they will have a joint ballot at the upcoming fall elections.
The independent Members of the Parliament - Kapon and Dal - declared this will be a long-term partnership having among its goals to propose a new model for governing the country.
The new coalition intends to have candidates in all municipalities at the local elections on October 23rd.
At the beginning of the year, Dal resigned as vice-chair of the Movement for Rights and Freedoms, DPS, after which he was formally expelled from the party for asking the ousting if its leader and long-time friend, Ahmed Dogan.
Through the 1980s Bulgaria's communist leadership staged a shameful campaign of repression against the country's ethnic Turkish minority, known as the "Revival Process." It led to the forceful renaming of close to a million Turkish-Bulgarians with Slavic names, and to the dislocation of some 350 000 of them to Turkey.
The Movement for Rights and Freedoms, one of the first opposition parties in Bulgaria, after the fall of the communist regime fell was founded by ethnic Turkish people, among whom Dogan and Dal, in order to safeguard the human rights of citizens. Since then, its electorate has been overwhelmingly from among the country's ethnic Turkish minority.
Kapon says her party is neither left nor right but its main purpose иs to work for the well-being of Bulgarian people.
The Commission for Protection of Personal Data has fined Bulgaria's Foreign Affairs Ministry for making public nearly 37 000 permanent addresses in the country of Bulgarian voters residing abroad.
Bulgaria spared over BGN 8 M in state budget money by carrying out its local and presidential elections on the same date in 2011, the country's Finance Minister Simeon Djankov has stated.
Former Justice Minister Margarita Popova was nominated by the ruling centrist-right party GERB to run for Vice President of Bulgaria in the elections that took place on October 23 2011.
Rosen Plevneliev, former Bulgarian Regional Development Minister, was elected President on the ticket of the ruling, center-right Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria part (GERB) on October 30 2011.
Rosen Plevneliev, Bulgaria's newly elected President, will be officially sworn in on Thursday.
Bulgaria's President-elect and Vice President-elect, Rosen Plevneliev and Margarita Popova, will take the oath of office before the National Assembly on Thursday, January 19.
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