EU TO BE CHAIRED BY 'DRUGS TRAFFICKERS,' 'PRISONER VOTES BUYERS'

EU TO BE CHAIRED BY 'DRUGS TRAFFICKERS,' 'PRISONER VOTES BUYERS'

Wed, 11/29/2017 - 14:02

As Bulgaria, a member of the EU since 2007, braces up to take over its first ever rotating presidency of the union, Prime Minister Boyko Borisov has warned: "There are members of parliament who are involved in drugs trafficking, there are individuals who have been buying the votes of prisoners, and there are people who call Bulgarians imbeciles."

Bulgaria is supposed to start its presidency on 1 January 2018.

Borisov's statement should be taken seriously by the EU and its law enforcement agencies because it comes at a time when Bulgaria was slammed once again by a damning EU report for its failure to fight corruption and reform its judiciary.

Significantly, Borisov failed to name who exactly in the Bulgarian National Assembly was involved with "drugs trafficking." Most of the mainstream media, known for being increasingly docile to the establishment, never asked. The leader of the opposition BSP, or Bulgarian Socialist Party, tried to pose the question in parliament, but she was banned from the rostrum by the speaker, a GERB member and a Borisov supporter, for what he termed insulting questions to the prime minister.

When a prime minister in any country accuses the supreme lawmaking body of accommodating "drugs traffickers," there are usually two options available. The police should investigate and arrest the alleged drugs traffickers, and the courts should try them. However, if no individuals belonging to that category are identified, the prime minister should resign because he or she has lied in parliament.

As this journal was going to press, it was reported that the GERB revealed several... newspaper articles that indeed alleged an MP for the BSP as being the culprit. The Office of the Chief Prosecutor promptly started an investigation on that basis.

Issue 134 Boyko Borisov

Commenting on www.vagabond.bg

Vagabond Media Ltd requires you to submit a valid email to comment on www.vagabond.bg to secure that you are not a bot or a spammer. Learn more on how the company manages your personal information on our Privacy Policy. By filling the comment form you declare that you will not use www.vagabond.bg for the purpose of violating the laws of the Republic of Bulgaria. When commenting on www.vagabond.bg please observe some simple rules. You must avoid sexually explicit language and racist, vulgar, religiously intolerant or obscene comments aiming to insult Vagabond Media Ltd, other companies, countries, nationalities, confessions or authors of postings and/or other comments. Do not post spam. Write in English. Unsolicited commercial messages, obscene postings and personal attacks will be removed without notice. The comments will be moderated and may take some time to appear on www.vagabond.bg.

0 comments

Add new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.

Discover More

three generations monument
'DEFILING' ABANDONED PILE OF STONES
Perushtitsa, now a small and offbeat town rarely visited by tourists, is known to every Bulgarian as the sight of a massacre in the failed April 1876 Uprising against the Ottomans.

gabrovo carnival
KOSTYA KOPEYKIN'S FOUNDATION KICKS OFF
Though Dead Souls used to be on the national school curriculum, few latterday Bulgarians, and possibly even fewer English speakers, have actually read it, so here is a short synopsis.

buzludzha night.jpg
BUZLUDZHA LIGHTS UP AGAIN
The Flying Saucer, which in recent years has become one of the Top 10 world monuments for urbex, or dark tourism, was constructed in the early 1980s. It was designed to celebrate the Bulgarian Communist Party, in control of this country from 1944 to 1989.

lz airplane
FLYING LOW
In early June a small plane flew into Bulgarian airspace from the northwest and landed at what used to be a commercial airport near Vidin. Apparently, the aircraft refuelled.