Sat, Nov 07 2009

President: Mogilino has been transformed

Mon, Mar 30 2009 15:55 CET 1120 Views 1 Comment
President: Mogilino has been transformed

Social and Labour Policy Minister Emilia Maslarova and President Georgi Purvanov

Photo: Georgi Kozhouharov

On March 30 2009 Social and Labour Policy Minister Emilia Maslarova presented a documentary on the Mogilino children's home, the centre that became notorious on account of its abandoned children, Bulgarian-language Dnevnik daily said on March 30 2009.

Maslarova showed the film during a round table on parentless children, hosted by President Georgi Purvanov in Sofia.

The home in Mogilino, near Rousse on the Danube, became infamous in September 2007 after BBC4 screened Kate Blewett's documentary Bulgaria's Abandoned Children. The heartbreaking images of children shown by Blewett shook both Bulgarians and foreigners, although some questioned Blewett's objectivity.

The film led the Agency for Social Assistance within the Ministry for Labour and Social Policy, as well as UNICEF and 16 NGOs, to adopt an action plan in October 2007 to shut the Mogilino home. A charity campaign was launched and 1.6 million leva was raised.

Maslarova's film shows children with mental disabilities in Mogilino being taught to communicate and deal with everyday life. As part of the Ministry's goal, 39 children have now left Mogilino although 30 children still reside there. Some of the children have returned to their families. Others have been sent to new family care centres.

"I hope that Mogilino will become a symbol of improvement because many things have changed there," Purvanov said.

These new centres were built with the help of the charity campaign and funds from state and municipality budgets.

A total of 23 homes for children deprived of parental care have been closed since 2003.

Comments

Anonymous upliniApatt Fri, May 22 2009 18:39 CET

This comment has been removed by the moderator because it contained .

Anonymous K.K. Tue, Mar 31 2009 11:46 CET
Inappropriate comment?

"I hope mogilino will become a symbol of improvement..." I would like to see it that way, Mr. President but I can't get my head up my ass that far.

Write comment

Name:Comment:

Generate new code
Send your comment
BBC to show Blewett’s sequel to documentary about Bulgaria’s Mogilino

Eighteen months after her documentary about the Mogilino children’s home in Bulgaria that caused an outcry about the treatment of the children, independent film-maker Kate Blewett has produced a sequel, to be shown on BBC4 on October 15 2009.

Little House for Mogilino children to be built in Varna

The first of five Little Houses offering shelter to eight children from the Mogilino social care home is being built.

Jordan will visit Bulgaria to adopt a child after watching Mogilino documentary

UK model and reality TV star Katie Price, known as Jordan, confirmed that she and husband Peter Andre had decided to adopt a child from Bulgaria, UK media reported. Jordan was determined to begin proceedings after watching the BBC4 documentary Bulgaria's Abandoned Children on the poor conditions in a social care home for mentally disabled children in the village in Mogilino, in Bulgaria.

Hopes for home for Mogilino children by 2009

The Unicef representative for Bulgaria, Octavian Bivol, said on July 16 2008 that he hoped that a new home for the children from the Mogilino social care home would be built by the beginning of 2009. The plight of the mentally challenged children at the Sveta Petka home in the village of Mogilino near Bulgaria's Danubian city of Rousse was exposed in September 2007 in a BBC documentary by Kate Blewett, entitled Bulgaria's Abandoned Children.

Of Mogilino and men

The sad story of the children with mental disabilities from the Sveta Petka home in Mogilino village, near the town of Rousse, became known to the public in September 2007 after BBC4 showed Kate Blewett's documentary Bulgaria's Abandoned Children. The heartbreaking images of the children shown by Blewett shook both Bulgarians and foreigners, although some questioned Blewett's objectivity. The film led to the

Five children to leave Mogilino social care home

Varna municipality would build a house for five of the children currently residing at the Mogilinо social care home in northern Bulgaria, according to the cooperation agreement signed on June 4 2008 by Varna mayor Kiril Yordanov, UNICEF and the State Agency for Social Welfare, mediapool.bg said. Varna would provide the land for the house in its remote neighborhood Vladislavovo. A total of 300 000 leva would be needed for the project, which would be spent on building the house and training staff. The money will come from the charity campaign launched by private broadcaster bTV.

More in this category

Influenza update: Sofia schools suspend classes

Kindergartens to be dealt with on a case-by-case basis and universities to decide for themselves whether to suspend classes.

Sliven police capture illegal immigrants bound for Greece

Five illegal immigrants from Iran and Iraq caught by Bulgarian police in Sliven.

Deputy head of veterinary service arrested on bribery charge

Leonid Lavchev sent an intermediary to collect 1000 leva from a dairy farm in Haskovo, investigators say

Former cabinet minister investigated for alleged embezzlement, malfeasance

Former labour minister Emilia Maslarova follows the example of Socialist party leader and former prime minister, Sergei Stanishev, in requesting that her MP immunity is lifted

Influenza update: sixth death in Bulgaria, Sofia schools face suspended classes

Health Minister: Influenza strain is not seasonal flu, it is swine flu. More than 100 000 Bulgarians are down with the H1N1 strain.