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Macedonian Parliament Ratifies Friendship Pact With Bulgaria

January 15, 2018 By administrator

Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov (left) and Macedonian counterpart Zoran Zaev speak to the press in Skopje in November.

The Macedonian parliament has ratified a friendship treaty with neighboring Bulgaria aimed at ending years of feuding and boosting Macedonia’s bid to join the European Union.

Sixty-one lawmakers in the 120-member parliament backed the pact on January 15, with the main opposition party boycotting the session.

The conservative VMRO-DPMNE party opposed the ratification, saying the pact contained “serious faults” and failed to recognize the existence of a Macedonian ethnic minority in Bulgaria.

Ahead of the vote, Macedonian Foreign Minister Nikola Dimitrov told lawmakers, “We are sending a message that even in our region we can maintain relations in a European way.”

Speaking during a visit to the Azerbaijani capital, Baku, Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov welcomed the result of the vote in Skopje.

“I hope that all countries, at some moment, will be signing this kind of treaties rather than waging wars,” he added.

Lawmakers in Bulgaria, already a NATO and EU member, had already ratified the pact, which was signed in August.

The treaty recognizes both countries’ territorial integrity and calls for an “objective” reexamination of the common history of Bulgaria and Macedonia, a process that could lead to a review of school textbooks.

Under the accord, Bulgaria, a NATO and EU member, pledges to support Macedonia’s efforts to join both blocs.

Macedonia’s rocky relations with its bigger eastern neighbor have hampered its efforts to join NATO and the EU, although the two countries share close religious, historic, and linguistic ties.

Bulgaria still does not recognize the Macedonian language, which it views as a dialect of Bulgarian.

Both Skopje and Sofia hope the new treaty will help them set aside such differences.

The two countries said they would also improve economic ties, renounce territorial claims, and improve human and minority rights.

The friendship treaty is a “joint contribution to political stabilization between the two countries and in the region,” Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said in Skopje after co-signing the pact with visiting Bulgarian counterpart Borisov.

“For the first time, without mediators or somebody telling us what to do, the two states came to a solution,” Borisov said. The treaty “shows the EU that the turbulent Balkans, which have passed through a lot of troubles, can solve problems by agreements without mediators,” he said.

“If you look back, you will stumble and fall,” Borisov said. “So we decided to look ahead. I am convinced that in 10 years the results will be visible.”

EU officials warmly greeted the agreement, which they described as “an inspiration for the whole region.”

Source: https://www.rferl.org/a/macedonia-parliament-ratifies-bulgaria-friendship-pact/28976973.html?ltflags=mailer

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bulgaria, friendship, Macedonian

The Bulgarian journalist who revealed the links between Azerbaijan and ISIS Daesh by supplying weapons … dismissed!

August 26, 2017 By administrator

The Bulgarian journalist, Dilyana Gaytandzhieva, who revealed in an article published on July 2 in the Bulgarian newspaper “Trud Daily” (Labor) that the flights of Azerbaijani companies supplied arms to the soldiers of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has been fired! According to the journalist, the security services of Bulgaria interrogated her on 24 August about his revelations about the supply of arms from Azerbaijan to Daech and Al Nusra by flights from the Azerbaijani company Silk Way. After the interrogation, she was removed from the newspaper “Trud Daily” by her editorial staff. D. Gaytandzhieva said he wanted to continue his investigation into this particularly sensitive issue. His writing did not give him time.

According to an extensive investigative report published by the Bulgarian Trud newspaper, during the last three years, at least 350 diplomatic flights on board Silk Way Airlines—an Azerbaijani state-run company—have transported weapons for war conflicts across the world.

Reported by Dilyana Gaytandzhieva who received a trove of documents from an anonymous Twitter account—Annonymous Bulgaria—the article says that Silk Way Airlines has carried tens of tons of heavy weapons and ammunition headed to terrorists under the cover of diplomatic flights.

The leaked files include correspondence between the Bulgarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Embassy of Azerbaijan to Bulgaria with attached documents for weapons deals and diplomatic clearance for overflight and/or landing in Bulgaria and many other European countries, USA, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, to name a few.

According to the documents, Silk Way Airlines offered diplomatic flights to private companies and arms manufacturers from the US, Balkans, and Israel, as well as to the militaries of Saudi Arabia, UAE, and the military forces of Germany and Denmark in Afghanistan and of Sweden in Iraq.

Diplomatic flights are exempt of checks, air bills, and taxes, meaning that Silk Way airplanes freely transported hundreds of tons of weapons to different locations around the world without regulation. They made technical landings with stays varying from a few hours to up to a day in intermediary locations without any logical reasons such as needing to refuel the planes.

According to the documents, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry has sent instructions to its embassies in Bulgaria and many other European countries to request diplomatic clearance for Silk Way Airlines flights.

“Some of the weapons that Azerbaijan carried on diplomatic flights were used by its military in Nagorno-Karabakh against Armenia. In 2016, Azerbaijan accused Armenia of using white phosphorus. Armenia denied the allegations and in turn accused Azerbaijan of fabrication, as the only piece of evidence was based on a single unexploded grenade found by Azerbaijan’s soldiers. According to the documents from the Embassy of Azerbaijan in Sofia, white phosphorus munitions were carried on a diplomatic flight via Baku the previous year,” the report reads.

U.S. sends $1 billion worth of weapons
“Among the main customers of the “diplomatic flights for weapons” service provided by Silk Way Airlines are American companies, which supply weapons to the US army and US Special Operations Command. The common element in these cases is that they all supply non-US standard weapons; hence, the weapons are not used by the US forces,” said the report.

“According to the register of federal contracts, over the last 3 years American companies were awarded $1 billion contracts in total under a special US government program for non-US standard weapon supplies. All of them used Silk Way Airlines for the transport of weapons. In some cases when Silk Way was short of aircraft due to a busy schedule, Azerbaijan Air Force aircraft transported the military cargo, although the weapons never reached Azerbaijan,” reported Gaytandzhieva.

Click to read Gaytandzhieva’s entire article.

Artsakh Presidential Spokesman Responds
After the publication of the Truda report, Artsakh Presidential spokesperson David Babayan told Public Radio of Armenia that the “Azerbaijan established ties with terrorism at the time it gained independence.”

“This is a well-known fact to everyone, especially the special services of the countries, which immediately deal with the Islamic State and the threat of terrorism,” Babayan told Public Radio of Armenia.
“Chechen militants were getting treated in Azerbaijan during the first and second Chechen wars. It was also providing medical services to Mujahideen during the Afghan war and the Grey Wolves Turkish extremist group, as well as other groupings, which were fighting against Artsakh during the first Artsakh war and the four-day war in April,” said Babayan.

He stressed however that merely reporting the facts was not enough and concrete actions should be taken based on the revelations.

“The international community has a lot to do here. The international community should take measures,” he told Public Radio of Armenia, adding that “we often see adverse developments instead.” “They entrust Baku to host first European Games, the Formula 1, a number of forums and conferences instead of taking anti-terrorist measures against the country.”

“These developments are the logical outcome of the world’s silence in response to Aliyev’s statement on the intention to down civilian planes flying between Stepanakert and Yerevan,” said Babayan, adding that “an evil grows into an epidemics if not uprooted at the beginning. Azerbaijan is one of the countries spreading the epidemics, one of the cradles of international terrorism.”

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, dismissed, ISIS, Journalist

Parliament speaker emphasizes development of the Armenian-Bulgarian relations, highlights the cooperation in terms of Armenia-EU relations

July 4, 2017 By administrator

armenia bulgaria relationThe Speaker of Armenia’s Parliament Ara Babloyan received on Tuesday Maria Pavlova Tzotzorkova-Kaymaktchieva, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Bulgaria to Armenia.

As the Parliament release reads, welcoming the Ambassador in the Armenian National Assembly, Ara Babloyan has underlined the old friendship and cultural connections formed between the two countries, which is a basis for the development of the Armenian-Bulgarian relations.

Ara Babloyan highlighted the role of the parliamentary diplomacy in the strengthening of bilateral relations and deepening of cooperation.

The RA NA Speaker stressed the importance of the activities of the parliamentary Friendship Groups and noted that Jemma Baghdasaryan will lead the National Assembly Armenia-Bulgaria Friendship Group in the near future.

The Head of the parliament touched upon the Constitutional reforms implemented in our country, noting that Armenia had passed onto a system of the parliamentary government. Ara Babloyan also emphasized the cooperation with Bulgaria in terms of Armenia-EU relations.

Regarding the regional problems the RA NA Speaker highlighted the balanced position of Bulgaria in the peaceful settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict in compliance with the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs’ and EU common position.

Thanking the NA Speaker for the warm reception, Ambassador Maria Pavlova Tzotzorkova-Kaymaktchieva highly assessed the relations existing between the two countries. She especially highlighted the role of Bulgaria’s Armenian community in strengthening of bilateral relations. The Ambassador assured that during her diplomatic mission she will continue to do his bestfor further developing and deepening the formed relations. Evaluating the cooperation between the parliamentary Friendship Groups and deepening of cooperation on the international different parliamentary platforms, Maria Pavlova Tzotzorkova-Kaymaktchieva noted that Bulgaria-Armenia Friendship Group has already been formed.

The interlocutors emphasized the further expansion of cooperation between the two countries and the development in the political, economic, cultural, educational and other spheres, the source added.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Bulgaria, relation

Bulgaria center-right Prime Minister Boyko Borisov set for return to power

March 27, 2017 By administrator

Bulgarians have backed two-time premier Boyko Borisov in a snap election. With newcomer populist groups also claiming seats, Borisov must form a coalition from a fragmented legislature.

Bulgarians backed Boyko Borisov for the third time in an early snap election held on Sunday. Official results put his pro-European Union center-right party in first place, winning almost 33 percent of the vote with 90 percent of the voter counted.

The 57-year-old head of Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria (GERB) party must now form the country’s fourth government in as many years. Borisov has resigned from the post twice before, once in 2013 after nationwide protests against poverty and corruption, and again after last year’s presidential election. The former firefighter’s most recent resignation and the following failure of Bulgarian parties to form government triggered the country’s third parliamentary elections in just four years.

Sunday’s vote, which was originally due to be held in 2018, tested the divided loyalties of the EU’s poorest country, pitting GERB against the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP), which came in second with around 27 percent.

The BSP conceded defeat late on Sunday, with the party’s leader saying it would look at options for forming a government should GERB find it cannot do so.

“We want to congratulate winners GERB,” party leader Kornelia Ninova told reporters after party doubled its popular support from the last parliamentary vote in 2014. “If they fail to form a government and we receive a mandate, we will try to form a Bulgarian government” to ensure stability in the country, which takes over the presidency of the EU on Jan. 1, 2018.

BSP, the successor to the Communist Party, promised to improve Bulgaria’s ties with Russia, but GERB has remained cautious of upsetting the country’s EU partners.

The Russian and Turkish influence

While Bulgaria historically has enjoyed strong economic and cultural ties with Moscow, Borisov is an enthusiastic European. Despite gifting Russian President Vladimir Putin a puppy in 2010, the Prime Minister has supported the bloc’s sanctions imposed on Russia over its role in the Ukraine crisis.

The socialists, on the other hand, vowed to vote against continuing the sanctions. A recent cartoon depicted the party’s leader, Kornelia Ninova, atop a Trojan horse with Putin inside.

The country has also endured wavering relations with Turkey, its southern neighbor. Bulgaria has a sizeable Turkish minority, and ahead of Sunday’s vote, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan criticized Bulgaria for “putting pressure” on the country’s 700,000 ethnic Turks. His Bulgarian counterpart, the BDS-backed President Rumen Radev retorted that he would not take democracy lessons from Turkey.

After casting his ballot, Borisov said “we will talk a lot about Turkey in the next few days.”

“Compromises must be made as well in order to maintain peace and calm. Such a tone of voice and such actions are fatal for Bulgaria,” he added. “They are a big power and we are on their frontier.”

Almost half of Bulgaria’s Turkish population has settled permanently in Turkey, but still hold Bulgarian passports and are eligible to vote. For two days leading up to the election, Bulgarian nationalists set up blockades at the Turkish border to stop citizens living permanently in Turkey coming in to vote.

‘Make Bulgaria great again’

The group behind the blockade was newly-formed nationalist party, the United Patriots. As well as railing against Turkey, the controversial group has taken issue with migrants, Muslims, Roma, gays and the EU.

The Eurosceptic, anti-Turkish group won almost 9 percent of Sunday’s vote. Newcomers Voyla, the populist creation of businessman Veselin Mareshki, also garnered the 4 percent needed to claim some of the 240 seats.

Mareshki, who is fond of his nickname as the Bulgarian Donald Trump, came fourth in last year’s presidential race after promising to drain the swamp of Bulgarian politics.

The comeback specialist faces fragmented parliament

Official results are expected on Monday. If they confirm the exit polls, Borisov has cemented his status in Bulgarian politics as the comeback king. But whether he can form a stable coalition is a different question.

The former mayor of Sofia previously ruled out an alliance with the Movement for Rights and Freedoms party, which represents Bulgaria’s Turkish population and won almost 8 percent of the vote. Along with Mareshki, the United Patriots could be a potential coalition partner for Borisov.

mcm/jm (AP, Reuters)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Boyko Borisov, Bulgaria, power

Snap election to test Bulgaria’s divided loyalties

March 26, 2017 By administrator


Former Bulgarian prime minister and leader of centre-right GERB party Boiko Borisov leaves after voting at a polling station in Sofia, Bulgaria, March 26, 2017. REUTERS/Stoyan Nenov

By Tsvetelia Tsolova and Angel Krasimirov | SOFIA

Bulgarians were voting in a snap general election on Sunday, with the center-right GERB party challenged for power by Socialists who say they will improve ties with Russia even if it means upsetting the country’s European Union partners.

Many Bulgarians feel a strong cultural affinity for Russia, with which they share the Cyrillic script and Orthodox Christianity and a decade after joining the EU, the Balkan country remains the bloc’s poorest member with corruption rife.

The Kremlin’s most loyal satellite during the Cold War era, Bulgaria remains a popular holiday destination for Russians attracted by its Black Sea beaches and low prices, and it is also almost entirely dependent on Russian energy supplies.

Opinion polls put the GERB party of former prime minister Boiko Borisov, 57, only narrowly ahead of the Socialists (BSP), who have seen their popularity rise since the candidate they backed, Rumen Radev, won the presidency in November.

Voting in the country of 7.2 million people got underway at 7 a.m (0400 GMT) on Sunday with the turnout by 10 a.m. (0700 GMT) 8.4 percent, slightly up from the previous parliamentary vote in 2014, the central electoral commission said.

Borisov resigned in the wake of Radev’s victory, triggering Bulgaria’s third parliamentary election in just four years.

While Bulgaria historically has had strong ties with Moscow, Borisov’s GERB party is strongly pro-EU and has supported the bloc’s sanctions imposed on Russia over its role in the Ukraine crisis.

“BSP is quite right. Who, if not Bulgaria, should be Russia’s closest partner? Why don’t we remember what Russia did?” said Georgi Kasabov, a 69-year-old pensioner.

“It liberated us, it helped us build so many factories,” Kasabov said, referring to the end of Ottoman rule in 1878 and industrial development during the Communist era.

The Socialists, led by 48-year-old Kornelia Ninova, have vowed to vote against continuing the sanctions, posing another potential headache for the EU as it grapples with Britain’s move to leave, the rise of right-wing populists and the future shape of the bloc.

Bulgaria takes over the EU’s rotating six-month presidency in January 2018.

“The GERB party, to a much greater extent, will maintain Bulgaria’s Euro-Atlantic orientation and integration,” said Boriana Dimitrova, an analyst with pollster Alpha Research.

“If Bulgaria begins giving up on participation in a number of EU integration policies, underlining its specific interest and privileged relations with Russia, that wouldn’t just put it on Europe’s periphery, it would move it into a different orbit.”

FRAGILE COALITION

The latest opinion poll put the GERB party on 31.7 percent and the Socialists close behind on 29.1 percent.

If it retains power, the GERB party is expected to maintain a tight rein on public spending – key to Bulgaria’s currency peg to the euro – in contrast to the Socialists who have pledged to raise wages and pensions and expand public spending.

“GERB deserves another chance to complete the good things it started,” said voter Radoslava Kamenova, 57, after casting her ballot in a Sofia suburb polling station.

“It is a modern party, which takes care of the young who are the future of this country,” she added.

Neither party, however, is likely to win enough votes to govern alone and will struggle to form what analysts expect to be a fragile and diverse coalition.

They will almost certainly have to court the United Patriots, an alliance of three nationalist parties polling third before the election thanks to widespread anger over the flow of migrants from the Middle East, Africa and Asia trying to reach Western Europe via the Balkans.

On Friday, the nationalists blocked Bulgaria’s border crossings with Turkey, saying they would stop Turks who hold Bulgarian passports from trying to vote to sway the election.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-bulgaria-election-idUSKBN16X011

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bulgaria, Election

Bulgaria deports Turkey official

March 21, 2017 By administrator

Bulgarian law enforcement detained and deported İbrahim Tarancı, a special director at the governorship of Turkey’s Edirne Province, on charges of threatening national security.

He has been banned from entering Bulgaria for 5 years, reported Birgün daily of Turkey.

Bulgarian police had said earlier that they deported a Turkish citizen, but they had not given any names.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bulgaria, deports, official, Turkey

Bulgaria & Moldova Switch from Hillary’s Clinton Euro-Atlantic Column

November 15, 2016 By administrator

untitled-1Written by Mark Almond

November 13th was as unlucky for stalwart backers of the foreign policy-line embodied by Hillary Clinton just as 8th November was for her domestic supporters. In both Bulgaria and Moldova, the voters rejected candidates for president who had been openly endorsed by Washington and Brussels. Having witnessed how small states with tiny electorates but vital Electoral College votes dealt body-blows to Hillary Clinton’s hopes of winning the US Presidency, it would be short-sighted and arrogant – as the Euro-Atlantic establishment has so often been – to dismiss voters in small East European states as irrelevant.

Having presumed that Bulgaria was irretrievably anchored in the Euro-Atlantic power-structure by its accession to both NATO and the EU, the choice of an openly pro-Russian candidate for president of the country is a wake-up call to Brussels and Washington. Similarly, the Moldovan elite had seemed locked into an “irreversible” course as its premier put it to integration – better said subordination – to the Euro-Atlantic model. In both cases, the majority of citizens thought different.

Until the implosion of the neo-con regime-change foreign policy embodied by Hillary Clinton and her attack-dog for Eastern Europe, Victoria Neuland, we could have been confident that the heavy-hands of Washington and Brussels would have pressured both Bulgaria and Moldova to reverse such results. Yet even cash inducements like the IMF’s sudden dole of US $36 million to the Moldovan regime just six days before the poll could not buy enough support . Even more striking was the Bulgarian public’s rejection of the pro-EU candidate who had boasted about how much EU aid to the poverty- stricken Balkan EU member was at stake. What ordinary Bulgarians and Moldovans know, and what the Euro-Atlantic elites and media never admit, is that EU funds have been a motor of the corruption suffocating their economies. Precisely because of the easy pickings EU and IMF cash provides to the ruling elites, they have no incentive to act in the majority’s interests. Real reforms are tough to enact and make the people richer not the insiders in the political class.

Until Trump’s election, the USA and EU deployed their massive power and influence to making any vote against their policy-options seem futile despite popular recognition of how they had gutted the productive aspects of both the Bulgarian and the Moldovan economies. Sunday’s elections in both countries may be straws in the wind. They are victories for the genuine people power of the ballot box, not the street-based populism of crowds favoured by Washington and Brussels to impose “people power” on the people. It is striking that the Bulgarian premier, Borisov, who is often criticised as “authoritarian” by state media in the EU like Deutsche Welle and the BBC as well as by Euronews, immediately resigned. He drew the democratic consequence of his own candidate’s defeat. But the premier of Moldova, Filip, who has been boosted by Euronews etc. as a model European, immediately said the popular vote would have no effect on his policies!

Even so, the election of advocates of better ties to Russia is a small geo-political earthquake in states NATO and the EU saw as securely-controlled bases for launching anti-Putin policies. No-one has died in these tremors in Bulgaria and Moldova. But the fact that the upheaval has been peaceful through the ballot-box leaves only violence as a viable way of reversing the will of the people. Both Bulgaria in 1997 and Moldova in 2009 saw violent Putsches from the street enthusiastically endorsed in Brussels and Washington as “People Power”. If the kind of Soros-sponsored protests Americans themselves are now witnessing at home against Trump are switched on in the East European dissident states the counter-explosion could destabilise the whole EU-NATO project in the vast post-Communist region which had seemed willing to lick the West’s hand no matter how often the West had imposed destructive poverty-promoting policies.

But now it would be unwise to think that the East European dogs can be kicked with impunity. They could turn vicious as the French say and bite back. A change of course in Washington could re-earn the pro-American consensus squandered over the last twenty-five years by the cynical Euro-Atlantic consensus. But can Western elites swallow their pride and learn the lesson of popular alienation. Or will they sink into denial and double-down on the policies which have rendered them despised by ordinary folk who see through phony rhetoric about swallowing touch economic medicine for their own good. East Europeans know that playing the reform politician not the entrepreneur is the way to get rich in their societies. Sadly, a lot of people in the West are coming to a similar conclusion.

So the Trump Effect has emboldened the ordinary voters of Eastern Europe to demand that their elite put the people first. Maybe the Donald didn’t mean that to be the outflow of his victory in the USA, but that’s how people there see it. If the rigid and impoverishing policies promoted by the US-EU consensus cannot be revised, then more results like those in Bulgaria and Moldova can be expected.

What should worry the US-EU establishment is that elections are coming in countries which won’t be so easy to ignore as small East European states. Next spring, the Dutch and the French vote. The anti-establishment tide in those two important EU and NATO states is running strongly. Years of rhetoric about reform and anti-corruption strategies across the New Europe of the old Soviet bloc coincided with rampant influence-peddling and bribe-taking.

“Drain the Swamp!” was one of Trump’s most effective slogans. Across Europe, it echoes powerfully precisely because of the hypocrisy and cynicism of domestic and Brussels-based elites who talked so loudly about their commitment to the right kind of anti-corruption strategies but, as East Europeans say, have their left hand cupped behind their backs.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bulgaria, Moldova, switch

Russia-friendly opposition candidate wins Bulgaria presidential vote

November 13, 2016 By administrator

rumen-radevRumen Radev, backed by the socialist opposition is poised to become Bulgaria’s President, exit poll results show.

Two pollsters are indicating Radev is leading by a wide margin in the runoff vote held on Sunday.

Sunday’s result, if confirmed, would constitute the first ever election loss of Prime Minister Boyko Borisov since the party was set up in the mid-2000s.

They also mean his running mate, MEP Iliana Iotova, will be Vice President.

According to an Alpha Research poll, Radev has garnered some 58.1% of the vote.

Main ruling party’s candidate Tsetska Tsacheva, nominated by Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, is trailing far behind at 35.3% of the vote.

Around 6.6% of voters have ticked the “I Do Not Support Anyone” option – or the so-called “protest vote” – that was introduced earlier this year.

Gallup International Balkan pollsters have projected nearly the same result, at 58.5%, 35.7%, and 5.8%, respectively.

Other polling agencies have yielded similar results which, however, are yet to be confirmed by electoral authorities.

Initial projections suggest Radev got the overwhelming support of all voters for candidates who polled worse in the first round, with the exception of Tsacheva’s electorate (with more than 98% having backer her) and those who voted for right-wingers’ candidate Traycho Traykov where more than 50% backed Tsacheva.

Turnout neared 48-50%. according to the pollsters.

Borisov earlier vowed to resign if Tsacheva lost the election.

He is yet to comment.

Labelled “pro-Russian” by his opponents and some Western and Russian media, Radev has been calling for a more pragmatic approach to foreign policy and steps to boost the judiciary, overhaul the armed forces and promote dialogue on how to raise the living standards.

– See more at: http://www.novinite.com/articles/177393/Socialist-Backed+Candidate+Wins+Bulgaria%27s+Presidential+Election+-+Exit+Poll#sthash.kPdktP9d.dpuf

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bulgaria, Rumen Radev, Russia-friendly

Armenian students won seven medals at the international mathematics competition in Bulgaria

November 3, 2016 By administrator

armenian-studentArmenian students won seven medals at an international competition of mathematics in Bulgaria reported the Armenian Ministry of Education and Science.

The Armenian team included students from the Yerevan State University (YSU), the American University of Armenia (AUA) and the Armenian-Russian University. Albert Gevorgyan and Albert Sahakyan YSU to have won gold medals, Vazgen Mikayelyan won a silver medal and Avetik Karagulyan won bronze.

Artyom Kosyan and Levon Stepanian, two AAU students were placed second and third, with silver and bronze medals, respectively, and Hrachya Kocharyan the Armenian-Russian University won a bronze medal.

Some 320 students participated in the competition in the city of Blagoevgrad, from 72 universities around the world.

The annual competition is organized by the University College London and is held in Plovdiv, Bulgaria since 1994.

Thursday, November 3, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Bulgaria, student

The International Association of Bulgarians recognizes and condemns the Armenian Genocide

October 22, 2016 By administrator

international-bulgarianFrom October 15 to 16 held in Varna (Bulgaria) 7th meeting of the “International Association of Bulgarians” in the presence of numerous representatives of Bulgarian associations from Bulgaria and many other countries. At this meeting was unanimously voted a text recognizing and condemning the Armenian genocide as a crime against humanity that killed 1,650 million Armenians. According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, this statement will be proposed to the National Assembly of Bulgaria for his vote.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: #armenianGenocide, Armenian, Bulgaria, Genocide, recognize

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