Sun, Nov 22 2009

Foreign briefs

Fri, Aug 01 2008 11:00 CET 158 Views

BOMBINGS IN TURKEY 
Two explosions in Turkey's largest city of Istanbul killed 17 people and injured more than 150 on the night of July 27 in the worst attack against civilians in the country since 2003. The bombs went off at about 10pm in the busy Gungoren neighbourhood located in the European part of the two-continent sided city. The second blast, which took place several minutes after the first one and reportedly 50 metres away, was the more powerful of the two. Police investigations are ongoing.

SERBIAN AMBASSADORS BACK
On July 24, the Serbian cabinet decided to reinstate Serbia's ambassadors to European Union member states that had recognised Kosovo's independence. The ambassadors were revoked "for consultations" earlier this year as a sign of protest against the recognition of the breakaway Serbian province. The proposition for reinstating the top diplomats was made by Serbian foreign minister Vuk Jeremic after consultations with president Boris Tadic.

RUSSIA HURRYING
Russia will work actively for the quick completion of the two major energy projects, South Stream gas pipeline and Bourgas-Alexandroupolis oil pipeline, Russian energy minister Sergey Shmatko said. Both pipelines will pass through Bulgaria. Shmatko discussed projects with Greek minister of development Christos Folias and Italian industry minister Claudio Scajola, respectively, telling them that the Russian cabinet was striving towards the construction of the two pipelines through the Balkans because they would increase the importance of Russian energy giant Gazprom in the European market, Dnevnik daily reported.

ONE CURRENCY IN MACEDONIA
Amendments to the law accepted earlier this week by the Macedonian parliament make payments in currencies other than the official Macedonian denar punishable with a fine equivalent to up to 7000 euro and between six months to five years of imprisonment, Bulgarian National Television said. The new amendments end an era in which euro, dollars and German marks were accepted in financial traffic, a practice that started in the former Yugoslav republic and continued after Macedonia's independence until the present day. The problem is compounded each year when Macedonians from abroad, as well as tourists, visit the country and prefer to pay in euro or dollars, in spite of exchange rates in the street being lower than the official rate. Exchange bureaux are expected to see an increased turnover.

Write comment

Name:Comment:

Generate new code
Send your comment

More in this category

EC suing Bulgaria for Sofia waste disposal failure

The European Commission is taking Bulgaria to court for delays in providing Sofia with adequate waste disposal facilities.

US ambassador-designate Warlick addresses senate confirmation hearing

James Warlick is the spouse of Mary Warlick, director of the office of Russian affairs at the US state department, who has been nominated to serve as ambassador to Serbia

Bulgaria declares flu epidemic at an end

Bulgaria’s Health Ministry announced on November 20 2009 that the flu epidemic declared two weeks earlier is at an end as rates of infection decline. The announcement coincides with reports of two deaths from A (H1N1) flu in Bulgaria.

Bulgarian prosecutors to investigate Dogan’s real estate deals

Acting on allegations by Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria leader Ivan Kostov, prosecutors and Government officials are to probe deals by which Movement for Rights and Freedoms leader Ahmed Dogan acquired various properties.

Sofia prosecutors charge Bulgaria’s former defence minister Nikolai Tsonev

Prosecutors allege that a deal agreed by the former defence minister caused losses of 12.9 million leva.