US State Department Warns of Increased Threat of Terrorist Attacks in Istanbul
The US State Department has warned of an increased threat of terrorist attacks against American citizens in Istanbul.
“Bulgaria is a transit country for heroin and cocaine, as well as a producer of illicit narcotics, especially amphetamine type stimulants." File Photo
The US State Department has praised the new center-right Bulgarian government for its efforts to combat major organized crime rings and judicial reform.
In the US State Department’s annual International Narcotics Control Strategy Report (INCSR) it stated that the “Bulgarian government is very cooperative, working with many U.S. agencies, especially DEA, and has reached out to neighboring states to cooperate in interdicting the illegal flow of drugs and persons. The Bulgarian government has shown a strong commitment to reforming its law enforcement agencies and judiciary.”
It added that “The new Bulgarian government has demonstrated political will to combat major organized crime rings and has begun prosecuting numerous cases of high-level corruption.”
On the narcotics subject the report delved into the local and international narcotics trade in Bulgaria; “Bulgaria is a transit country for heroin and cocaine, as well as a producer of illicit narcotics, especially amphetamine type stimulants. Astride Balkan transit routes, Bulgaria is vulnerable to illegal flows of drugs, people, contraband, and money. Heroin distributed in Europe moves through Bulgaria from Southwest Asia via the Northern Balkan route, while chemicals used for making heroin move through Bulgaria to Turkey and Afghanistan. Marijuana and cocaine are also transported through Bulgaria.”
It continued; “Bulgaria continues to be primarily a drug transit country for heroin and cocaine. Cannabis was the most used drug in Bulgaria followed by synthetics. Heroin use remained constant during the year with experts estimating the number of heroin users to be 20,000 to 30,000 in 2009. Consumption of cocaine, primarily consumed by the wealthy, continued to increase.”
The report also included suggestions that Bulgarian criminal gangs are involved in money laundering, and drugs trafficking in Italy and Austria as well as adding that Bulgarians are used by Albanian gangs from Kosovo and Macedonia as overland couriers to the Czech Republic.
The Sofia Regional Prosecution Office has formally charged an Italian national over a series of thefts committed at a retail outlet at Sofia’s Vasil Levski Airport, authorities confirmed on Wednesday.
In Bulgaria's region of Montana, authorities reported another case involving counterfeit euros after a man attempted to pay his water bill with a fake 100-euro note
In Kazanlak, a grocery store owner recently identified a counterfeit 100-euro banknote in circulation. Tihomir Bezlov, chief expert of the Security program at the Center for the Study of Democracy
Bulgarian authorities seized 215 liters of alcohol from a commercial premises in the village of Malo Konare, Pazardzhik region, the Regional Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Pazardzhik reported.
A family of pensioners from the village of Lozno in Kyustendil became victims of a robbery after converting 50,000 leva (approximately €25,500) into euros at a local bank.
A counterfeit 500 Euro (BGN 980) banknote was discovered in Pernik after being used to claim winnings at a local casino.
Bulgaria's Strategic Role in the EU's Drone Wall Defense Initiative
When Politics Means Violence