Sun, Nov 22 2009
Sofia City Court ordered investigators to dig deeper in the case of the murder of pharmacology student Stoyan Baltov, which prompted mass protests in December 2008.
Knifeman left the scene in a taxi. One of the victims was on Bulgaria’s national ice hockey team.
More than 30 "illegal ventures" in Studentski Grad have been ordered to close and are pending demolition after the latest investigation from the Sofia Directorate for Construction Control. Discussions for the renovation of the campus will be initiated on April 15-20
In an attempt to analyse the first day of the so-called national protest on January 14 2009, Bulgarian media, politicians, participants and onlookers alike seem to have come to one conclusion: intended as a peaceful rally, the protest was corrupted by outbursts of hooliganism that led to police brutality, and it was prematurely cut short by Sofia municipality.
The initiative committee comprising student, environmental and farmer organisations used the slogan "United we stand to bring about change" as a rallying cry meant to galvanise the Bulgarian society for a national protest scheduled for January 14, which was announced at a news conference on January 12 2009.
The Sofia Administrative Court (SAC) threw out the request of the owners of nightclub Amnesia to reverse the order of the Directorate for National Construction Supervision (DNSK), which prohibited the use of the club, Bulgarian broadcaster Mediapool.bg said. The club made headlines in December 2008 when Stoyan Baltov was beaten to death in front of the building in a drunken fight.
Starting today, January 5 2009, Sofia municipality initiated an on-site check to establish whether all clubs and restaurants in Studentski Grad (Students' Town) are legally operating with all paperwork in place, private broadcaster bTV reported.
Night club Amnesia in Sofia's Studentski Grad (Student Town), which became notorious after student Stoyan Baltov was beaten to death outside the club, will have to be torn down, Bulgarian media reported. After an inspection by National Construction Control Directorate (NCCD), it appears the club was built illegally.
Sofia mayor Boiko Borissov said on December 21 that he asked Sofia prosecutors to investigate Ventsislav Doudolenski and Teodor Kolarski, the former mayor and chief architect of the Studentski Grad district, respectively, on suspictions of abusing their powers. Borissov claims that the duo have overstepped their authority by allowing the illegal construction and operation of the Amnesia disco, in front of which medical student Stoyan Baltov was murdered on December 5 2008.
Owners of nightclubs in Sofia's Studentski Grad neighbourhood refused to be called "mutri" and asked to be included in the discussion on what can be done to improve the security situation in the neighbourhood, which is home for thousands of university students from all over Bulgaria, private national broadcaster bTV said on December 19 2008. Mutri is Bulgarian slang for thick-necked mafia heavies, often driving black 4x4s.
The European Commission is taking Bulgaria to court for delays in providing Sofia with adequate waste disposal facilities.
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’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.
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.
Prosecutors allege that a deal agreed by the former defence minister caused losses of 12.9 million leva.