“The presentation, in parliament, of a report on the work of the prosecutor’s office by Prosecutor General Ivan Geshev should usher in a debate on the need of a change to the constitution,” said Bulgarian Socialist Party MP Anton Kutev in an interview for the BNR.
“The Grand National Assembly of almost 30 years ago gave the prosecutor general a high level of independence but no option for his replacement,” Anton Kutev said.
In his words Prosecutor General Ivan Geshev is operating “on the fringes and beyond the fringes of the law,” attending to the interests of part of the elite and businesses at the expense of the other part.
“Beneath the surface of society there are questions that are “burning”- should the constitution be amended, and if yes, how – are we going to have a presidential republic, and are we going to alter the powers of the prosecutor general, are we going to have a different number of MPs in parliament? Unless these problems are solved institutionally, they will be solved spontaneously in the streets,” Anton Kutev said. He predicted a new wave of protests in the autumn.
Romanian police and military personnel worked as mercenaries in Congo According to a report by the Romanian Ministry of the Interior, 11 of its employees worked as mercenaries in Congo while on sick leave, Digi24 reported. The Ministry..
Protesting Serbian students to cycle 1,300km to Strasbourg A group of 80 protesting students and other people from four Serbian universities – in Novi Sad, Belgrade, Niš and Kragujevac started cycling from the campus of..
Protests in Turkey continue after Istanbul mayor's arrest Mass protests in Turkey continue after Istanbul mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu was arrested on March 19. Nearly 1,900 people have been detained for participating in the..
+359 2 9336 661