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”.
The Commission on Protection of Competition has requested information from producers and retailers of fast-moving consumer goods to determine the pricing methods, delivery conditions and factors influencing price changes . The focus of the study is on..
There is finally political will at the highest level to resolve the conflict between Ukraine and Russia through diplomacy, and this process must be supported, President Rumen Radev told journalists before the opening of the Munich Security Conference...
Deputy Minister of Defence Radostin Iliev and Deputy Chief of Defence Lt. Gen. Krassimir Kanev hosted senior U.S. officers from the National Defense University on February 14. The officers, who have completed the CAPSTONE Senior Military Leadership..
Kristiyan Vladov and Stefan Kyurkchiev of the Plovdiv Museum of Natural History are working on a project to bring live fish from the southern Arctic..
The one-year anniversary of the death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was marked with a memorial service in Sofia's St Nedelya Cathedral. It..
Bulgarian Finance Minister Temenuzhka Petkova will travel to Brussels to provide an update on Bulgaria’s progress towards euro area accession. The..
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