Tue, May 22 2012
President Georgi Purvanov meets Greece's prime minister George Papandreou in Athens November 25 2009.
Photo: Reuters
Greek-owned businesses in Bulgaria say Athens’ public finance woes will not affect operations, but Sofia’s eurozone hopes are likely to take a hit
Governments in Prague and Bucharest could soon join Sofia in instituting temporary moratoriums on shale gas exploration.
Coalition around ruling Democratic Party has largest share of vote in Serbia's parliamentary election, according to exit polls.
Centre-right New Democracy is said by exit polls to have largest share of votes, but diminished even from its 2009 defeat, while socialists Pasok – the 2009 victors – gets somewhere around 14 to 17 per cent.
An agreement reached with the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) will allow voters with dual citizenship in Kosovo to vote in the upcoming parliamentary and presidential elections in Serbia.
Twenty radical Muslims suspected of being members of a terrorist group that has been linked to the murder of five fishermen in early April.
Now there's a statement of optimism from the Greek Finance Minister, if ever there was one !
When I read:
<< The finance minister also called for a "suspension of disbelief" so the international community would not lose faith in Greece in the meantime.>>
....I start believing in Father Christmas all over again !
The international financial community does not do "statements of disbelief" - instead it "short-sells" using hedge funds to drive markets even lower (and in the process make even more money for itself.) [...]
Read the full comment That's what markets do.
You may not like it, any more than UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown likes it, but that's the nature of the beast.
(No criticism of the Sofia Echo article - it's a good and accurate report.)