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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Person of the week -> 
Law professor becomes Bulgarian interim PM
    2014-08-08  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    Georgi Bliznashki became Bulgarian interim prime minister Aug. 6 after a Socialist-led government led by Plamen Oresharski resigned in July. His tenure will last until a new government is formed

    after the early parliamentary election in October.

    A BULGARIAN law professor and former Socialist lawmaker was named caretaker prime minister Aug. 5 until the next election, as the Balkan state grapples with the fallout of its worst banking crisis since the 1990s.

    Georgi Bliznashki, 57, took over as premier while Rumen Porozhanov, a 49-year-old former senior civil servant, will be finance minister, President Rosen Plevneliev said in a televised statement to the nation.

    The interim government follows the resignation of the Socialist-led coalition at the end of July, paving the way for a snap election Oct. 5, the second in less than two years.

    Bliznashki inherits a raft of problems to sort out. In the past year, Bulgaria has struggled with sluggish economic growth, months of street protests against corruption, a diplomatic dispute over the Russian-led South Stream pipeline, deadly floods and a sovereign credit rating downgrade in June.

    Most pressing is the fate of Corporate Commercial Bank (Corpbank), Bulgaria’s fourth largest lender, which was hit by a run on deposits in June. It remains shut pending a full audit into its books ordered by the central bank.

    Efforts by the outgoing government to rescue the lender were scuttled by parliament last month, and there is no agreement yet on to what extent the bank’s depositors and bondholders will be protected in a possible state rescue.

    Making matter worse, lawmakers Aug. 4 blocked a proposal for the interim government to raise new debt that could have been used to rescue Corpbank, limiting Bliznashki’s options to solve the crisis.

    “In times of political crisis, we will work for more stability, dialogue and transparency in governance,” Bliznashki told reporters.

    Corpbank’s problems have put renewed scrutiny on the investment climate in Bulgaria, the European Union’s (EU) poorest member state and one of its most corrupt. Holders of dollar denominated bonds may sue the government if they don’t get their money back.

    The interim government will get the ball rolling for Bulgaria to join the EU’s banking union, work to unfreeze blocked EU aid, and prepare a revision plan for the budget, Plevneliev said.

    The president had appealed to parliament to allow his government to raise new debt and make changes to the budget, warning that a failure to do so would hamper his administration and risk hurting the economy.

    The debt could also have been used to pay workers at State-run construction projects and pay fines to Brussels in order to unfreeze EU aid programs.

    “Unfortunately the parliament in its last days remained deaf to the necessary revision of the budget. ...” Plevneliev said.

    “The responsibility will lie not with the interim government but with those who, led by their tactical considerations and party propaganda, missed the interest of the Bulgarian people.”

    Bliznashki promised Aug. 6 to restore public trust in political institutions in the short time that his caretaker government is in office. Bliznashki vowed his cabinet will strictly uphold Bulgaria’s Constitution to safeguard transparency, rule of law and democratic development.

    “We need to restore citizen society’s trust in the political institutions,” Bliznashki told reporters. “Our caretaker government will do its best so that the elections are held with the active participation of the civil society.”

    Bliznashki was formerly a senior member of the Socialist party but was kicked out earlier this year, after he openly endorsed an anti-government, anti-corruption student occupation of Sofia University.

    An outspoken critic of the outgoing coalition, Bliznashki also drew fire from his party by becoming the head of a committee that collected over 560,000 signatures to support an initiative by the president for voting reform.

    Porozhanov has held various positions at the finance ministry and was also on the supervisory board of the State-controlled Bulgarian Development Bank until last month — one of two institutions invited to help rescue Corpbank.

    Bliznashki will also have to decide whether to approve an agreement with Westinghouse Electric Company — signed by the outgoing government — that enables the construction of a new nuclear reactor estimated to cost US$5 billion.

    The agreement would help Bulgaria reduce its energy dependence on Russia at a time of increased tensions between Moscow and Brussels over Ukraine. Bulgaria at present is one of five EU states totally dependent on Russia for nuclear fuel.

    Plevneliev further said that construction work on South Stream, a pipeline that would pump 63 billion cubic meters of gas per year to Europe via the Black Sea, bypassing Ukraine, would remain frozen until Brussels green-lights the project.

    The main opposition GERB party, which had ruled the formerly communist country until it was brought down by street protests in February 2013, is tipped to win the October election.

    Bulgaria has been dogged by two years of political instability, which prompted Standard & Poor’s to downgrade its sovereign credit rating to one notch above junk in June.

    Plevneliev also said his government would nominate Kristalina Georgieva as Bulgaria’s candidate for the next EU Commission, without specifying for which post. Georgieva is seen as a possible contender for the EU’s foreign policy chief.

    Bliznashki, a professor of Constitutional Law, was among a group of lecturers who backed a student occupation of Sofia University as part of wider anti-corruption protests against the Socialist-led government.

    Earlier this year he headed a citizens group that backed President Rosen Plevneliev’s demand for a referendum to change voting rules in the country.

    He became one of the few senior Socialist party members to openly criticize the ruling coalition, which prompted the party to expel him in March.

    Bliznashki, who joined the Socialists in 1977, was twice elected on a Socialist party ticket as a member of parliament and was a European parliament deputy for six months in 2007.

    (SD-Agencies)

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