Crossing Borders: Bulgaria's Full Schengen Membership Transforms Travel to Greece and Romania
With Bulgaria's full integration into the Schengen Area, citizens now have the ability to travel freely to neighboring Greece and Romania
During the past week, the Lukoil saga reached a new peak with several twists and turns surrounding the revoked, and later reinstated through a Court's rule, license of the Russian-based company, owner of the only oil refinery in the country.
Politicians, economists, legal experts, journalists, Bulgarian and Russian, local and foreign, came one after another offering analysis and wisdom about the scandal that gripped Bulgaria in the middle of the hot beach season.
In the downpour of words, on the backdrop of violently shaking stock exchanges and economies of leading world powers, two statements went unnoticed and without much comment:
On Wednesday, Bulgaria's Commission for Competition Protection announced that on the explicit "request" of Economy and Energy Minister, Traicho Traikov, they have "self-referred" a probe to establish if there are cartel deals and abuse of the dominant position of Lukoil on Bulgaria's fuel market.
In a Friday TV interview, Prime Minister, Boyko Borisov, declared he assumes full responsibility in the Lukoil case since after discussing it with the Customs Head and the Finance Minister, he decided to give them a green light for the revocation of the license.
There is something deeply wrong about a country where State institutions "self-refer" work they are supposed to initiate, and do so on the request of someone from the cabinet, and where the country's leader orders the law to be enforced.
Two statements inconceivable in well-functioning States and true democracies...
If we look at history, there are not many cases in which relations between Bulgaria and Russia at the state level were as bad as they are at the moment.
The term “Iron Curtain” was not coined by Winston Churchill, but it was he who turned it into one of the symbols of the latter part of the twentieth century by using it in his famous Fulton speech of 1946.
Hardly anything could be said in defense of the new government's ideological profile, which is quite blurry; at the same time much can be disputed about its future "pro-European" stance.
Look who is lurking again behind the corner – the tandem of Advent International and Deutsche Bank, respectively the buyer of the Bulgarian Telecom Company in 2004 and the advisor of the Bulgarian government in the sweetest deal of the past decade, seem t
We have seen many times this circus which is being played out during the entire week and it only shows one thing - there is no need of a caretaker government in Bulgaria.
You have certainly noticed how many times President Rosen Plevneliev used the phrase “a broad-minded person” referring to almost every member of his caretaker government.
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