Bulgarian Irina Bokova placed second after former Portugese Premier Antonio Guterres during the latest voting at the UN Security Council, Reuters news agency informs. According to the first results published after yesterday’s voting, Bokova placed fourth after Serbian Vuk Jeremic and Slovak Miroslav Lajcak. However, Reuters analysts contend that Irina Bokova outruns those two candidates, because Jeremic received one discouraging vote more by the permanent members of the UN Security Council and Slovak Lajcak gathered less overall support. According to Reuters, Bulgaria’s new nominee Kristalina Georgieva placed 9th. According to yesterday’s ranking, Georgieva placed 8th in that voting. Antonio Guterres was supported by all 15 members of the UN Security Council and remains the favorite for the UN top job. His candidature is expected to be approved later on Thursday.
A major restructuring of Bulgarian State Railways - Cargo (BDZ Cargo) is underway, including cost-cutting and a review of all freight tariffs, Transport and Communications Minister Grozdan Karadjov said on Monday at a meeting with trade unions in the..
The Plovdiv District Prosecutor's Office is overseeing the investigation into the death of 6-year-old Angel, who died after being given an anaesthetic for dental treatment at a dental clinic in Plovdiv. The investigation is aimed at establishing the..
His Holiness the Bulgarian Patriarch Danil officiated at the opening of the 100th anniversary edition of Forest Week, as announced on the Bulgarian Patriarchate website. The service was held in the square in front of the Patriarchal Cathedral of St..
Drivers travelling today and in the coming days should prepare their vehicles for winter conditions , the Road Infrastructure Agency has urged. The..
The Ministry of the Interior has submitted 13,000 reports about poor road conditions in 2024 . This was revealed in an interview with Nova TV by Chief..
The large-scale inspection, carried out by the competent police structures of the National Police Directorate and the regional directorates of the..
+359 2 9336 661