Political and Economic Changes In Bulgaria Over the course of the past two months, January and February 1997, Bulgaria has undergone some sweeping political changes and its economy has deteriorated into further collapse. The following is an attempt to describe the events which took place in Bulgaria in January and February of 1997. This is somewhat of a difficult task given the current rate of political, economical and social changes which are occurring in Bulgaria. What follows is an account of the events which have taken place in Bulgaria over the last two months i. e. January and February of 1997, subject to the news material which was available to me and to the time constraints of this project.
Bulgaria’s economic crisis exploded into popular outrage at the beginning of January 1997, when previously quiescent Bulgarians poured into the streets to demand that the governing BSP, leave power now rather than when their four-year term expires at the end of 1998. After a month of mostly peaceful daily protests that paralysed Sofia and brought much of the country’s business to a halt, the Socialists, who lack the kind of fiercely loyal police and media that have sustained President Slobodan Milosevic in neighbouring Serbia, submitted to the protesters demands on Wednesday, February 5 th 1997. They agreed to hand over power to a caretaker government until new elections in mid-April, which they are unlikely to win, when recent polls conclude that only 10% of the population currently support theBSP. ‘We’d better celebrate now, because we have very hard days ahead,’ said Ivan Kos tov, leader of the opposition United Democratic Forces. (Source: OMRI Daily Digest, 18 th February 1997.
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The newly elected Bulgarian President Petar Stoyanov named an interim cabinet headed by Sofia Mayor Stefan Sofianski to oversee the country and its collapsing economy until a new parliament is chosen in general elections scheduled for April 19. The appointment means that the mass protests forced the leaders of the Socialist majority in parliament to agree to a new ballot 20 months before the end of their elective term. Sofianski’s caretaker cabinet includes strong critics of the BSP and has announced it will abolish the economic development portfolio created by them. This new caretaker government has already begun to dismantle the large number of government Ministries which were set up by the former Communists, theBSP. Literally thousands of Civil Servants are being made redundant, as the caretaker government attempts to pave the way for Administrative Reform in both the Central and Local Governments of Bulgaria.
Just before this project went to press, on Thursday, the 27 th of February, 1997, Poland agreed to give Bulgaria 100, 00 tons of wheat to help it deal with the grain shortages. Bulgaria has already opened its wheat reserves in an effort to ease the continuing bread shortages. The loan will be repaid when Bulgaria’s grain reserves are replenished. (Source: OMRI Daily Digest, 28 th February 1997.
) The German Foreign Minister, Klaus Kink el, speaking in Bonn on 27 th February 1997, commented that ‘Bulgaria is on the brink of economic economic catastrophe’, and he appealed to Sofia not to delay economic reforms any longer. (Source OMRI Daily Digest, 28 th February, 1997).