Tumgik
#Valentin Geshev
beardedmrbean · 2 years
Text
The former mayor of the capital district "Mladost" Desislava Ivancheva goes to prison. She announced this herself on her Facebook profile.
It is clear from the publication that the Supreme Court of Cassation has handed down an effective sentence against her in the case of a bribe demanded from construction contractor Alexander Vaklin.
On her Facebook profile, Ivancheva also published clips of how the Main Directorate "Execution of Punishments" took her out of her home, where she was under house arrest.
"I don't know how to arrange luggage for 6 years," she asks in the video, while her mother holds her almost one-year-old grandson Valentin-Alexander in her arms. Asked what will happen to her son, the former mayor answered through tears:
"I don't know. I don't know what will happen to my child, maybe the social services will take him from me because my mother is old".
The video shows her being taken out of her home by police and put into a blue bus. Her little baby remains in her grandmother's care, for now.
Ivancheva's deputy Bilyana Petrova and the former regional mayor Petko Dyulgerov are also in prison, according to the final decision of the supreme judges.
A report on the case shows that Desislava Ivancheva was sentenced to six years in prison, a fine of BGN 12,000 and disqualification from holding a leading state and municipal position for eight years. Petrova was sentenced to five years in prison, a 10,000 fine and disqualification from holding office for six years. Petko Dyulgerov was sentenced to four years in prison, a fine of BGN 8,000 and disqualified from holding office for a period of six years.
The three were detained in the center of Sofia on April 17, 2018, as pre-marked euro banknotes given by the extorted construction contractor Alexander Vaklin were seized from the car in which Ivancheva and Petrova were traveling.
As mayor and deputy mayor of "Mladost", Ivancheva and Petrova were accused of forcing Vaklin to give them a bribe in exchange for issuing a building permit. The role of Petko Dyulgerov, who was also the mayor of the region in the past, was that of a mediator.
The investigation was one of the first that the Specialized Prosecutor's Office conducted in the line of combating corruption together with the Anti-Corruption Commission. At that time, the head of the special prosecution was the current Chief Prosecutor Ivan Geshev.
The arrest of Ivancheva and Petrova, followed by their detention in pre-trial detention, led to protests in their defense, both of them maintained their innocence until the end and declared themselves victims of the fight against corruption.
In support of Ivancheva and Petrova, this evening a protest in front of the Courthouse is being organized
3 notes · View notes
mariacallous · 1 year
Text
GERB party leader and ex-PM Boyko Borissov on Wednesday denied long-standing allegations of taking part in a money-laundering scheme in Spain after Chief Prosecutor Ivan Geshev on Tuesday demanded he give up his political immunity. 
The prosecution says there is now incriminating evidence that Bulgaria’s PM for much of the time from 2009 to 2021 provided third parties with funds – acquired from crime – to purchase and rent real estate abroad. 
“I have not had, do not have and do not plan, to have any property in Spain,” said Borissov who since coming first in inconclusive general elections on April 2, has sided with his former opponents in “We Continue the Change” WCC and its allies Democratic Bulgaria on plans for judicial reform, which would see the ousting of Geshev; his removal has long been sought by GERB’s opponents as a guarantee before any possible collaboration. 
Under Geshev, the prosecution was hitherto passive about the allegations swirling around Borissov, but he has now activated the institution against the GERB leader.
In recent statements, Borissov hinted at possible vengeful motives, pointing out that the prosecution took no move against him when he had no political immunity from 2021 to the recent elections in April. 
In 2020, when Spanish media investigated the so-called “Barcelonagate” case, the prosecution did not act. The case has been mentioned in the Bulgarian media as early as 2016. 
On Wednesday, former Miss Bulgaria 2001 Ivayla Bakalova and former Lukoil director Valentin Zlatev were brought as witnesses and were questioned in the Sofia Prosecutor’s Office on the case. “The prosecution long slept on the case, I’m glad it woke up,” Bakalova told the media. 
The development is part of a dynamic change in Bulgaria’s political landscape, and is happening just as GERB/United Democratic Forces and opponents in the WCC/Democratic Bulgaria engage in tense negotiations on a joint cabinet to end Bulgaria’s political stalemate – which saw five general elections in two years.
“The grand goal of all of this is for the [joint] government not to happen,” Borissov commented on Wednesday, claiming he had not seen Bakalova “for decades”.
More names from the Bulgarian political scene might be mentioned in relation to “Barcelonagate”. 
In January last year, the assets of media mogul and Movement for Rights and Freedoms MP Delyan Peevski were revised by the National Revenue Agency in relation to the case, but with no substantial findings.
Peevsky was one of the politicians mentioned in the Pandora Papers, and was designated in the Magnitsky sanctions against Bulgaria in 2021 and by the UK government in 2023.
In the meantime, parliament’s relationship with President Rumen Radev is worsening. Radev is seen as an obstacle to the formation of a stable government, as that would end his series of interim cabinets through which he has increased his influence in the last two years.
Radev called the current government-forming mandate, given to the WCC, “compromised”, after an audio leak created speculation that its leaders, Kiril Petkov and Assen Vassilev, are coordinating moves with the US and the EU – which their opponents call treasonous.  The President has not commented on the Prosecution’s actions against Borissov.
0 notes
jaberbock · 8 years
Text
Palabras de un pasado común ¿que pueden declinarse en futuro?
Palabras de un pasado común ¿que pueden declinarse en futuro?
Grafonetika o un glosario no apto para radicales Igual que el pez que nos mira con cara de por qué al final de “Water“, el cortometraje escrito por Daniel Nenchev, mientras el niño apura el vaso de agua, sabiendo que lo condena a la muerte, son muchos los que al viajar a los Balcanes se preguntan las razones de quienes pretenden exacerbar las diferencias más que agotar las posibilidades de…
View On WordPress
1 note · View note