Sat, Nov 21 2009
A real race for uncovering Thracian treasures before the tombs were looted had began in Bulgaria, National Geographic magazine said in its article Bulgaria's Gold Rush.
Bulgaria was El Dorado for treasure hunters, a vast trove of buried treasure where some graves have harboured gold since at least 4000 BC, the magazine said.
Officially the state possesses Bulgaria's ancient treasures. The law was followed strictly during the communist era and numerous unique ancient artifacts have been found and given to the authorities.
By that time Bulgaria's factories produced everything needed for the population and in risking to sell treasures on the black market was not worth it, National Geographic said.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Bulgaria's economy was affected too. Hundreds of thousands of people lost their jobs and some of them are still unemployed. Those who work, earn around $200 a month.
With the former middle class flat broke, many have taken up looting to earn a living, the report said. A 'black archeology' appeared.
Nikolai Ovcharov, one of Bulgaria's most prominent archaeologists, said that the artifacts business was more profitable than the drug trafficking.
Welcomed by the UK government, France and Germany, as well as the US, the naming of Belgium’s Herman van Rompuy as European Council President and Catherine Ashton as foreign policy chief has caused misgivings in some circles, including Turkey which believes that Van Rompuy will oppose Turkish membership of the bloc.
The dinner meeting of EU leaders to decide on the European Council President and the bloc’s new foreign minister and head of secretariat could take a few hours or all night, says host Fredrik Reinfeldt, Sweden’s prime minister.
Russia and the European Union have agreed on an early warning system if another natural gas cutoff looms. Some say that Bulgaria, among other countries hard-hit by the January 2009 crisis, is now better prepared. Not everyone is convinced.
Five Bulgarian films screened at the World Film Festival in Bangkok.
A complicated game, played partly in the dark, and with elements of everything from poker to tug ‘o war – that’s the way Europe’s leaders will come up with its new European Council President, foreign minister and European Commission.