Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Bomb attacks in Turkey engender pressure in Bulgaria

Photo: EPA/BGNES

This week’s bloody bomb attacks in Turkey raise some sobering and disturbing questions, and not just in Turkey but also in its neighbours.

Out of the twelve people killed in the bombing in Istanbul’s Vezneciler district, two – a woman and a police officer – turned out to be Turkish nationals of Bulgarian origin. Investigations were launched to find out whether the bombers hadn’t been assisted by neighbouring countries and the Turkish authorities asked Bulgaria’s help in collecting information about the individuals crossing over into and out of Turkey from Bulgaria. This put the Bulgarian authorities under additional strain – in 2015 alone, checks were run on 17,130 foreign nationals ascertaining that 181 of them may be a national security threat.

The additional concerns raised by the acts of terrorism in Turkey match the concerns the Bulgarian authorities have. The annual 2015 government report on national security states that in view of the terrorist acts in neighbouring countries there is a risk of the emergence of logistics centres on the territory of Bulgaria for use by terrorist groupings. Some analyses suggest that for the recent terror attacks in Turkey the “rival brothers” – the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and the so-called Islamic state - had already entered into cooperation. There is no confirmation at this time of Bulgarian citizens involved in fighting on the side of terrorist organizations, but there have been suspicions and the special services have had to run checks on that too. There may be no ISIS cells in Bulgaria, but there are signs of imitative behavior by radically-minded Islamic elements in Central Bulgaria. The investigations of the terror attacks in Turkey include finding out who hired given vehicles over the past week. This too concerns Bulgaria because, as it turns out one of the cars damaged in Istanbul belongs to a Bulgarian citizen, a woman whose car was used by a foreign national without the formal documents attesting to the sales transaction, the aim being to avoid taxes. This is no isolated case but a widespread practice that must certainly be put a stop to, and not just for taxation but also for security reasons. To top it all, the terrorist acts in neighbouring Turkey coincided with debates on amendments to the counter-terrorism act, the aim being to put in place much tougher measures against terrorism. This, in turn, triggered negative reactions among the public and some political forces who see them as a crackdown on civil rights and liberties. All this comes to corroborate the well-tested truth that in the Balkans, any problems in one country quickly spread to the others and the best way to counteract them is by pooling the efforts of all.

English version: Milena Daynova



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Ivan Tsankov from Argentina: Our elections are like that joke about the crow and the cheese

Ivan Tsankov is Bulgarian who has been living in Argentina for more than 20 years and is the secretary of the "Bulgarians in Argentina" civic association. He and his wife Aksinia maintain the website "Los bulgaros - the Bulgarians in..

published on 6/9/24 7:41 PM
Sibila Stoyanova

Bulgarian elections in Belgium- vote for a winner or a coalition

The election day in Brussels is unfolding amid an unusually sunny weather, reports Sibila Stoyanova, secretary of one of the two polling stations at the Bulgarian Embassy in the Belgian capital. There are a total of 16 polling stations in Belgium. It is..

published on 6/9/24 4:43 PM
Hristo Hristev

Assoc. Prof. Hristo Hristev: EP is not about numbers, but about being prepared and knowing how the EU institutions work

The European Parliament is the only body in the EU directly elected by its citizens. 6 138 050 Bulgarian voters have the right to elect 17 political representatives of Bulgaria in the new European Parliament for the next five years. Today's elections..

updated on 6/9/24 1:33 PM