Mon, May 21 2012
State-owned operator Bulgarian State Railways (BDZR) will halt hauling raw materials and production to and from the Kremikovtzi steel mill if it does not pay all debts by February 25, Bulgarian Deputy Transport Minister Georgi Petarneichev said, as quoted by zagrada.bg.
BDZ halted cargo haulage two weeks earlier for the same reasons. Then Kremikovtzi covered 60 per cent of its liabilities toward the railway operator. Now BDZ demands the payout of the remaining 40 per cent.
Kremikovtzi acknowledged it owed BDZ 17 million leva, but is disputing another seven million leva. On February 20, Bulgarian Economy and Energy Ministry refused to give Kremikovtzi a three-month grace period on overdue payments.
On the same day, the majority shareholder of Kremikovtzi was imposed a 239.2 million leva fine for failing to meet its investment guarantees.
Sofia City Court ruled in favour of the Agency for Post-Privatisation Control (APPC) in a case that dragged on for four years, whose start saw Kremikovtzi change ownership. In 2003, despite Kremikovtzi assets being impounded, which did not stop erstwhile owner Valentin Zahariev from selling Finmetals to Indian industrialist Pramod Mittal.
The sum is the leva equivalent of 180 million US dollars that the majority owner of the mill had to pay to APPC to ensure implementation of its five-year investment programme. Roussi Statkov, member of the APPC supervisory council told Dnevnik daily that Mittal had to provide $30 million in bank guarantees and $5 million as promissory note.
Bulgarian Trace and SK 13, Spanish OHL, Greek Terna and Czech Brno are all bidding for the construction of the railway.
The funding is provided under the foreign military sales programme of the US army's Program Executive Office of Simulation, Training and Instrumentation.
The UK nationals were arrested after throwing beer bottles at people after being refused entry to a restaurant that had closed for the night.
Restoration and development projects include Madara Horseman, Arbanassi fortress, Magura cave.
Simeon Saxe-Coburg and his spouse Margarita opened a new heating and insulation system at the Tsar Ferdinand Hospital for Pulmonary Diseases in Iskrets, a project implemented thanks to the Embassy of the Sovereign Order of Malta in Sofia and the Nando Peretti Foundation.
According to the law's provisions, the commission will have the power to investigate individuals without prior notification and would not require a criminal conviction in order to launch an investigation.