As of March 10, visitors at public facilities are no longer required to present a green certificate. This is the second step to ease anti-epidemic restrictions, which is due to the falling coronavirus morbidity in Bulgaria. However, the green certificate remains mandatory for the staff employed at public facilities.
The restriction on the number of children attending in-person classes in various educational centers and schools has been lifted as well.
The anti-epidemic measures introduced in Bulgarian schools are expected to be abolished in the coming days.
Bulgaria has updated its list of countries it deems to be “Covid-19 red zones” and has abolished the category “dark red zones”.
From the beginning of 2025, Bulgarian scientists will work on a large-scale project related to hydrogen and hydrogen technologies to help develop cleaner transport and energy, science communicator Petar Teodosiev said in an interview for BNR. In his..
One thousand more blood donations were made in the past year at the Center for Transfusion Hematology of the Military Medical Academy, the medical institution reported. "The number of blood donors exceeded 7,000 – half of them are civilian..
Ten babies have been born in the past year under the donor program of Sofia Municipality to support families with reproductive problems. Among them there are two pairs of twins. Baby Mihaela took its first breath yesterday. Her parents received..
Caretaker Minister of Energy Vladimir Malinov has ordered that by the end of the day, problems with the electricity supply in settlements affected..
In the Sofia region, residents of the capital's Dragalevtsi district, the villages of Kiliite, Simeonovo-Dragalevtsi and Yarema, and the villages of..
As Bulgaria marks Father's Day, the Shared Parenting Foundation is organising a protest calling for legal changes to ensure that children of separated..
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