Food Chain Boycott in Bulgaria Concludes After Partial Victory
The Initiative Committee for the Boycott of Retail Chains in Bulgaria has announced the end of its protests
Thousands of Czechs have protested against Czech President Milos Zeman on the 25th anniversary of the Velvet Revolution, which ended communist rule.
Demonstrators in Prague carried football-style red cards as a warning to Zeman, while others threw eggs. One accidentally hit the German president Joachim Gauck was in Prague for the celebrations, along with the presidents of Hungary, Poland and Slovakia.
The demonstrators carried banners reading "down with Zeman" and "we do not want to be a Russian colony".
As the president unveiled a plaque to the students involved in the 1989 protest, he was booed, jeered and pelted with eggs, tomatoes and sandwiches.
Security guards used black umbrellas to shield Zeman and other presidents from thrown objects. According to the German embassy in Prague Gauck was hit in the head by an egg.
The crowd repeatedly shouted “Shame, shame” and “Resign, resign”, at Zeman, while the other presidents were applauded.
“I’m not afraid of you!” Zeman retorted to the crowd, while security guards shielded him. “Twenty-five years ago it was dangerous to go out on the streets. It required courage. I was among the demonstrators then. It is cowardly of you to come here and pelt us with eggs.”
Many worry that Zeman, a former communist, is too close to both Russia and China.
The Velvet Revolution began on 17 November 1989 when police attacked a student protest.
A wave of demonstrations followed across the now Czech Republic, toppling the communist government and replacing it with one led by dissident playwright Vaclav Havel.
An explosion took place at a munitions warehouse in the Poličské strojírny plant, located in the Svitavy district of Czechia, on March 25
The European Union is set to introduce a two-year probationary period for young drivers, a first in the bloc’s history
Poland has announced plans to significantly ramp up domestic production of anti-personnel mines as part of efforts to reinforce its eastern borders
During a recent hearing at the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON), MEP Tsvetelina Penkova raised the issue of Bulgaria’s accession to the euro area and sought clarity on how the European Central Bank (ECB) plans to support the country in th
European Commissioner for Start-ups, Research, and Innovation Ekaterina Zaharieva has called on the European Research Council (ERC) to increase its funding for prominent researchers relocating from the United States
EU leaders have agreed to significantly ramp up defence spending and enhance Europe’s military capabilities over the next five years
Bulgaria's Perperikon: A European Counterpart to Peru's Machu Picchu
Bulgarians Among EU's Least Frequent Vacationers, Struggling with Affordability