Bulgarian Novel Exposes Soviet Role in Katyn Massacre
In his novel The Expert's Mistake, Bulgarian Miladin Apostolov revealed shocking truths about the mass executions of Polish officers in Katyn Forest
Bulgaria’s government is trying to sell at a public auction the country’s own TU-154 aircraft, similar to the one that crashed in Russia Saturday with Poland’s President, Lech Kaczynski, on board.
In February, the Ministry of Transport began a procedure to sell the TU-154 which is part of the government "Aviation Squad 28."
The aircraft, known as the “President’s Plane,” has been involved in several incidents during it years of service; the latest on January 30, 2008, when President, Georgi Parvanov, had come back from an overseas trip without reaching his destination after the plane did an emergency landing on the Azores.
The craft is still been auctioned. It became obsolete after the President, the Prime Minister and the Speaker of the Parliament began using the Airbus A 319 which is leased from Balkan Holidays Airlines.
The cabinet wanted to return the second Airbus back to the leasing company, but the outcome remains unclear and the Council of Ministers is now considering keeping it for official use.
The 2 Airbuses cost the State EUR 190 M. Part of the funds was paid in advance by the former Three-Way Coalition cabinet, led by socialist Prime Minister, Sergey Stanishev.
Poland’s President, Lech Kaczynski, who was due to visit Smolensk to mark the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, in which Soviet troops killed thousands of Poles, died Saturday when the government TU-154 plane crashed near the airport of the Russian city.
According to latest reports, all 96 passengers and crew also died. The delegation included top politicians, clergy and military men, among them the Governor of the Polish Central Bank, the Army’s Chief of Staff, former ministers, Members of the Parliament, deputy ministers, relatives of the 1940 Katyn victims, intellectuals.
With Bulgaria set to adopt the euro on January 1, 2026, questions are surfacing about whether the country might face financial risks similar to those that led to Greece’s debt crisis
The Dutch gambling sector finds itself at a crossroads.
The introduction of dual pricing in leva and euro is progressing smoothly and, in some cases, even ahead of the planned timeline in Bulgaria
Annual inflation in Bulgaria accelerated slightly in May, reaching 3.7%
E-signatures have transformed document signing, offering many benefits over traditional paper signatures.
Bulgaria’s Ministry of Labor and Social Policy released its National Employment Action Plan (NAP) for 2025 in early May,
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