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Monday, 13 June 2011

Meglena Kuneva on the lack of transparency in Bulgarian politics: "We can't go on like this!"


Shortly after officially stepping forward as a candidate for the presidential elections, the first Bulgarian Euro commissioner Meglena Kuneva talks about her independence as a candidate and explains what motivates her to run for the position and how she intends to achieve her goals.

She first stepped into the spotlight in 2001, when she was a member of the National Movement Simeon II (NDSV) party. NDSV was hugely popular when it came to power but, since then, its support has deteriorated year upon year and, at the moment, it is 3% and it is unlikely to have a strong comeback.

Kuneva, however, has remained a popular figure and, according to the sociological research, carried out by Gallup International, the only potential candidate with a higher rating is the current PM - Boyko Borisov. If he puts himself forward, he would receive 35%, whereas she would have 26% of the votes. At the same time, Borisov's candidacy is unlikely, because the presidential post is a representative one and doesn't hold nearly as much power as the prime-ministerial one.

In the current situation, this means that Kuneva leads the race and she's better off as an independent candidate. She has a strong platform, which appears to address the main issues in Bulgarian politics - the economy and the still ubiquitous presence of corruption on all levels of the state. Appealing though it seems, her manifesto may well prove to be overly ambitious for the limited powers of the Bulgarian President.

Mrs Kuneva, you say you are an independent candidate, but how are you going to convince people that you haven’t got any hidden business or political agendas?
In politics there is only one answer to that question and I don’t hold a monopoly on it. It’s called transparency. But equally, I am a politician with 10 years of experience behind me. And during those 10 years I have proved that I am a transparent politician. I haven’t appointed anyone for political reasons, I don’t have economic interests of my own, nor do the people that are close to me. So this is a good starting position. 

Still, where does the money for your campaign come from?
It hasn’t yet, but it will be raised in a lawful manner. I won’t hide that the Institute of Modern Politics has helped me a lot so far. That is why, wherever I went, there was a banner behind me, showing the three foundations that took part, the Friedrich Naumann foundation, the Institute of Modern Politics and the Liberal Institute for Political Analysis. There were always representatives from these organisations present and we have always explained what they are doing. There are a lot of volunteers as well.

You are not looking for the support of a political party, but what if it is offered to you?
This would be the party’s decision. I haven’t been offered support so far. Backing a candidate is discussed within the party structure and the parties talk to their supporters. I think there should be a deep understanding within our society about the goals I am setting myself. Party derives from “part”, whilst I want to unite the pro-change majority. And this majority can come from a lot of different backgrounds. But a direct support from a given party... if this had been my formula, I would have followed it. The fact is that I haven’t.

You talk about transparency in government and lifting up the curtain. Which presidential powers are you going to use in order to achieve this?
Not the powers, but the practice. If it was just a question of powers, it wouldn’t be possible. Every power can be executed transparently or non-transparently. The appointments that are made within a system, for example the presidential quota within the constitutional court, could be effected on a competitive basis, it could be done following a wide debate within the guild.

But you also talk about transparency outside the presidential institution, in bodies like the parliament...
Yes. At least to lay the foundations and then year after year we can develop to our full potential. You can’t make a good law about business without consulting business. You can’t make a law about students without consulting the students.  In times of such deficit of vision and ideas for change, to ignore the vision and ideas of the people is an utterly unaffordable luxury for Bulgaria. We have to get energy and knowledge from somewhere. And control, to correct them on the way.

All this, in my opinion, can be achieved best by bold actions on the part of the people.

So how would you lift the curtain off the shady public orders?
If the president cooperates with the parliament and the government, he or she can raise these issues. The president couldn’t calculate the electricity bills. Here’s something that they keep on overcharging us for. And it’s not the government’s fault. But the president can choose not to remain silent when the people are being lied to. The president can voice his/her opinion. He/she can insist on a debate. No government, no institution could resist if there is a strong, well-structured public interest, backed by the president, for more transparency, for more action in one sphere of life or another.

The public opinion is a great force. You are a journalist. You don’t have direct powers, you can’t make a decision on this or that matter. But the media’s interference, in fact, opens the way for a better, more transparent practice. And this is raising the curtain, which hides the authorities.

But someone has to take the first step and go the whole way. It can’t be possible for us to not be able to do that. And we can’t go on like this! These two statements are equally true and they are the source of my ambition to take that first step.

There have been accusations that you haven’t worked entirely in Bulgaria’s interests during the negotiations about its accession to the EU and you have also been severely criticized for not taking your mandate as an MEP. Do you think that, in the eyes of the Bulgarian people, you may be a candidate, who is too European and not enough Bulgarian?   
No, I don’t. I think that Bulgarians are Europeans and their support for our entry in the EU was constant and decidedly large. Actually, it’s the fact that I achieved this goal, of which generations have dreamt, gave me the courage to carry on and ask them for so much trust and support in these elections.
When it comes to the negotiations, for that period of time, for the EU in that shape and for the fifth expansion, they were flawless. I am ready to go through them page by page and word by word and to keep on explaining what and why we have negotiated.

What bothers me is that we have acquired only 10% of the negotiated by us 13 billion leva (£5.8 bln) worth of subsidies. After we had accumulated enough trial-and-errors. Let us say that during the first year things didn’t work properly, because we didn’t know enough. Year after year we learn from our mistakes. Yet, unfortunately, things haven’t changed a lot. 

About me not taking my position in the European Parliament...  Look, it was so clearly in my personal interest to take that position, that it excludes any possibility for anyone to say that I was being led by my personal interest.

I stayed in order to finish the mandate as a commissioner. I stayed because of the other 300 million that I managed to get for the Kozloduy nuclear power station. If I hadn’t done that, the money would have either disappeared or wouldn’t have been given then, there would have been a gap between 2009 and the new financial framework and we would have lost a lot.

Also, it wasn’t right for the Bulgarian commissioner’s place to be left vacant for months during its first mandate.  

So as a president you could influence directly the amount of money we manage to receive?
Saying that I can directly change the degree to which we assimilate the money is an overstatement. But yes, I can! I can influence with a clear judgement, with a more united effort from everyone: the Council of Ministers, the business, the boroughs, the government... Also, I can use my influence in the EU itself. But, frankly, we have a lot of well-wishers out there. But we need to give them enough good arguments for them to help us. And I can do that, yes.

Thursday, 9 June 2011

An international forum on human trafficking is taking place in Sofia

Several hundred thousand people are being trafficked to and within the EU every year.

A two-day forum, called "Trafficking in Human Beings: Legal Practices and Challenges," began today in Sofia. Specialists from 14 countries have gathered in order to exchange knowledge and experience as well as the legal frameworks of the countries of origin, transit and destination of the victims.

According to the Deputy Interior Minister Veselin Vouchkov, the differences in legislation between the countries of origin and the destination countries for human trafficking is one of the biggest problems, facing those who seek to tackle the problem.

Her Excellency Judit Lang, the Hungarian Ambassador added: "The Hungarian presidency [of the EU] is making great efforts to deal with this issue, because the trafficking in human beings is becoming a more serious problem than we originally thought it would be. We want to unify somehow the approach of all the member states and enhance the cooperation." According to Ambassador Lang, the most important steps the member states need to take are data collection and cross-border cooperation in tackling the problem.

A particular focus was also put on the trafficking for purposes other than sexual exploitation. The UK was mentioned as one of the destination countries were this is a big problem. According to David Dillnutt, Head of the UK Human Trafficking Centre (UKHTC), domestic servitude is especially hard to tackle: "The difficulty with domestic servitude is its nature. We are encouraging the reporting of the crime, there is also provision of victim services throughout the UKHTC and various NGOs in order to try and get people to report and then prosecute the offenders."

The case of Mwanahamisi Mruke, which emerged in March this year shed some light on the problem. The Tanzanian woman had had her passport taken away from her, denied liberty and communication with her family. She was forced to work for 18 hours a day and was kept on a poor diet and lived in appalling conditions. All these factors, combined with her inability to speak English meant that she was unable to seek help for a very long time.

Dillnutt added that a new government strategy, involving tougher border control, working with the countries of origin, a multi-agency work within the UK and a continuation of victim services, is also being implemented in Britain.

Photo source: http://ec.europa.eu/news/justice/101018_en.htm

Related links:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/mar/17/slave-wins-case-hospital-director
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-13440736
http://www.mtvexit.org/traffic_is.php?lang=1

Tuesday, 7 June 2011

Proposals for changes in the Higher Education Law hailed by rectors

Boyko Borisov with the Education Minister Sergei Ignatov (left) and the Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov.

Universities will have the right to collaborate with other institutions, if the new Higher Education Law passes through Parliament, announced the Prime Minister Boyko Borisov at a meeting with rectors and members of the Education Commission in the Council of Ministers today.

They will also be allowed to form partnerships and sell and develop programmes with other universities and colleges not only from Bulgaria, but other countries as well.

Other amendments to the current law would enable HE institutions to validate the education that their applicants have previously received and to decide how much they would charge for their Masters programmes. At the moment students, who had received all or part of their education abroad, had to have their studies validated by the Ministry of Education. The state also sets the maximum amount the institutions could charge for postgraduate courses.

The Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov said that the changes are aimed at facilitating the intake of foreign students at Bulgarian universities and building up their reputation abroad. With a growing number of students choosing to study in other EU countries, the rectors at the meeting hailed the amendments as "timely" and "necessary".

The date for Parliament to vote on the changes, however, hasn't been set yet.

Monday, 6 June 2011

EU politician Meglena Kuneva to run for president

Meglena Kuneva: "My party is Bulgaria!"
 
The first Bulgarian EU commissioner Meglena Kuneva officially announced today that she will be running for president in the upcoming elections.

She announced her decision to put herself forward as an independent candidate and assured journalists that she won't be seeking support from any of the parties on the Bulgarian political scene: "I am not going to knock on the door of any political party in search for support. My party is Bulgaria! It cannot be right-wing or left-wing. Education cannot be party-political, nor can culture or even the economy. " She added that if caring for the vulnerable in the society and working towards a welfare state would be considered a left-wing policy, it would be balanced by guiding the economy with a firm hand and supporting business development.

Kuneva stated that she will work towards the unification of the people, the return to law and order, the development of education and culture, tackling the demographic crisis and the state-funded health care as well as improving Bulgaria's image on the world political and economic stage.

However, the presidential post in Bulgaria has primarily representative functions and some may consider her goals to be unrealistic. Responding to the challenge, she said: "I cannot say that in five years time our education system will be perfect. That 100% of the Bulgarian pupils will A-star students. I cannot tell you that in five years time the Bulgarian text books will be the best or that our universities will be among the top 10 in the world. But what I can tell you is that we will make a huge progress."

Friday, 3 June 2011

Design and the new gastronomía en España


The Spanish culinary design exhibition Foodjects has opened doors to the public today in the Sofia Press gallery.

Leading Spanish chefs and designers have teamed up to create more than 100 pieces of kitchen and dining-ware. The exposition was inspired by the revolution in the preparation, serving and storage of Spanish food. It holds items specifically designed for the best haute cuisine restaurants in Spain as well as affordable kitchenware for everyday use.

A virtual rose, a Gaudi-inspired chocolate, engraved cutlery and a Lladrò-style vase are but a few of the amazing items that can be seen there. The exhibition is taking place at the Sofia Press Art Gallery from 2 to 18 June 2011. Entrance is free.

Sergi Vich - Foodjects curator assistant 

Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Switching paints: the best of the French industrial design on display in Sofia

The French industrial design exhibition "33 Stars of the Observer" was opened to the public today in the Sofia City Art Gallery. The display marks the beginning of Sofia Design Week, as well as being a part of the celebratory events for the 20th anniversary of the French cultural institute in Bulgaria.

"This year we have tried to organise more events which would also have a stronger appeal to the public. This exhibition has traveled around the whole world, but has never been shown in Bulgaria, so we made it come here to mark the occasion," commented Didier Talpain, the director of the Institute.

The exposition holds the best creations of the French industrial design for the last year, including high-tech paints, kitchen gloves and champagne-cooling boxes. In order to receive a "Star of the Observer", each of these items has had to display a number of characteristics like innovation, comfort, low price, high quality and eco-friendliness.

"The significance of design is different for each and everyone of us, but, ultimately, it is what brings beauty in our everyday life," said Mr Talpain, who is also the cultural councilor of the French embassy. The coordinator of Sofia Design Week, Adriana Dimitrova, added: "Design is all around us. Everything we use has been designed by someone so it would be useful and comfortable and so it would bring joy to us."

The exhibition is taking place in Sofia City Art Gallery from 1 to 26 June 2011. Entrance is free.



The lights-switching paint is one of the highlights of the exhibition.