UNICEF and WHO Highlight Bulgaria’s Progress While Europe Faces Vaccine Hesitancy Crisis
UNICEF and WHO reports reveal that despite widespread vaccine hesitancy threatening child health across Europe and Central Asia
by Krysia Kolosowska
February 17, 2010
About 200 illegal Bulgarian Roma immigrants camping in Bordeaux, France, have accepted government incentives and agreed to return to Bulgaria. But critics say they will just be back again within a fortnight.
The immigrants were offered E4R 300 per adult and EUR 100 per child to return home. The French office for immigration and integration handled their transport.
The operation has been slammed as "costly and unnecessary", by Jerome Lobao, the president of the ProCom group, which is a part of the Romeurope human rights organization.
"Many of them said they would return to Bordeaux in ten days," said Lobao, explaining that a bus return fare from Bulgaria costs around EUR 50.
ProCom is striving to improve the living conditions of the Roma people throughout Europe. But according to Lobao, administrative red tape is discouraging prospective employers from offering legal employment to Roma immigrants, forcing them to work illegally or turn to begging.
There are about 10 illegal immigrants camps in and around Bordeaux, which hold about 400 Roma people, the majority of which hail from Bulgaria.
Brazen Bulgarian gangs "terrorise the elderly and rob them over their life savings with increasingly aggressive phone scams nettling millions of euros," according to an AFP story.
The prospect of US President Donald Trump's moving closer to Russia has scrambled the strategy of "balancing East and West" used for decades by countries like Bulgaria, the New York Times says.
Bulgarians have benefited a lot from their EU membership, with incomes rising and Brussels overseeing politicians, according to a New York Times piece.
German businesses prefer to trade with Bulgaria rather than invest into the country, an article on DW Bulgaria's website argues.
The truth about Bulgaria and Moldova's presidential elections is "more complicated" and should not be reduced to pro-Russian candidates winning, the Economist says.
President-elect Rumen Radev "struck a chord with voters by attacking the status quo and stressing issues like national security and migration," AFP agency writes after the presidential vote on Sunday.
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