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Picture Of Bulgaria
Lom - Bulgaria

Principal Locations
  1. Asenovgrad
  2. Aytos
  3. Blagoevgrad
  4. Botevgrad
  5. Burgas
  6. Dimitrovgrad
  7. Dobrich
  8. Gabrovo
  9. Gotse Delchev
  10. Haskovo
  11. Kardzhali
  12. Karnobat
  13. Kazanlak
  14. Lom
  15. Lovech
  16. Petrich
  17. Pleven
  18. Plovdiv
  19. Plovdiv
  20. Razgrad
  21. Ruse
  22. Sandanski
  23. Sevlievo
  24. Shumen
  25. Silistra
  26. Sliven
  27. Smolyan
  28. Sofia
  29. Stara Zagora
  30. Svishtov
  31. Targovishte
  32. Troyan
  33. Varna
  34. Veliko Tarnovo
  35. Vidin
  36. Vratsa

Resources


Picture Of Bulgaria



Combating Global Terrorism and Crime

As to the first part of the question and those individuals that were detained in the wake of September 11th, in the course of doing the investigation as to who was responsible, and most particularly, as to who in the United States might be contemplating a second wave of attacks, we and other federal and state and local law enforcement agencies interviewed a number of people. And in the course of those interviews, they fell into three categories: One is, those who were detained. Every person who was detained was detained for one of the three reasons: Either there were outstanding charges, federal, state and local, which warranted the detention; or secondly, there were outstanding immigration issues and the person was out of status and was detained by the then Immigration Service, now ICE; or thirdly, there was a very limited grouping of people that were detained as material witnesses, and the individuals were taken before a judge who would monitor their testimony before the Grand Jury. ... [Read More]

U.S. Foreign Assistance Programs

Mr. Chairman and other distinguished Committee members, I am pleased to participate in your examination of U.S. foreign assistance programs. U.S. assistance is key to achieving our foreign policy goals in Europe and Eurasia, and we greatly appreciate your current and past support in providing us with this important diplomatic tool. I am pleased to have with me today Dr. Kent Hill, my counterpart from the U.S. Agency for International Development. Also, sitting behind me is Ambassador Carlos Pascual, the Coordinator of Assistance to Europe and Eurasia. We are fortunate to have in our Bureau a Coordinator with statutory authority over assistance in our region; we think this helps maintain a strong link between foreign policy objectives and assistance programs. A ... [Read More]


Dr. Lesser said that 10 years ago, nobody was talking aboutMediterranean in a very serious way. Today, we are here andtalking about the future of Mediterranean. This is thequalitative and quantitative change. Ten years ago we wouldhear a different rhetoric, one more concerned with ideology. Today, we do not talk about the clash of civilizations,fault-lines, and about the possibility of convergence. It is a newworld and it is a new situation. The problem is, from theTurkish point of view, that Turkey perceives the world asdifferently as the world perceives Turkey. We do not liveseparated from the realities of the world. But differentperceptions exist -- in Europe, in America, in the rest of theworld, and in Turkey. ... [Read More]

IV. Country Narratives: Europe and Eurasia

The Government of the Czech Republic specifically criminalizes the trafficking of individuals for the purpose of sexual exploitation, and the Cabinet has recently approved for submission to Parliament criminal code amendments to criminalize other forms of trafficking, such as trafficking for forced labor. Currently, Czech authorities prosecute forced labor cases under human-smuggling provisions. A special division of the Organized Crime Investigation Unit of the State Police is specifically trained and dedicated to trafficking crimes. This unit is authorized to use special investigative techniques such as electronic surveillance and undercover operations. During the reporting period, Czech authorities arrested 19 and convicted five other individuals under trafficking statues. Of the five convicted, only one received a prison sentence of one to five years; four received conditional sentences, akin to suspended sentences. Czech authorities also arrested 103 and convicted 80 individua ... [Read More]

Bulgarian Youth Town Hall

US- Bulgaria relations are going very well. We are so honored that Bulgaria is now a member of NATO. It is going to be fully within the EU in the not too distant future. It is so active in OSCE. and has been willing to take the chances of sending its troops to places like Afghanistan and the Balkans and Iraq. And I regret that some of those troops lost their lives, but freedom sometimes has that cost associated with it. And people say why should troops be from Bulgaria? Why should the people of Bulgaria be concerned about the freedoms of the people of Iraq or Afghanistan? But if you want to be part of the international community, and for a nation that had lost its freedom for a long period of time, I think it’s noble that you should be willing, your country, your people be willing to undertake these kind of challenges and make these kinds of sacrifices. And my heart goes out to the families of those who lost their soldiers or the two truck drivers who were so brutally ... [Read More]

USIA, Economic Perspectives, May 1998 -- IPR

Take the case with Sweden and Denmark, for example. Our softwareindustry needs the right to conduct surprise searches of thepremises of a corporation if the corporation is using copies ofU.S. software without authorization. Denmark and Sweden feelthat the right to have surprise searches is limited to criminalcases, not civil cases. The U.S. copyright industry prefers tobring civil complaints because it has a hard time persuadingprosecutors to consider software piracy comparable to murder,robbery, and such. Yet software companies can't make their caseagainst these corporations unless they can have these surprisesearches. So that's the dispute we're having with Sweden andDenmark. It's a rather sophisticated issue compared to theabsence of a copyright law. We have broader problems ofinadequate enforcement in Greece and Italy. ... [Read More]

2004
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US Department Of State Post Report

AERA, CLO, and the Marine Security Guard Detachment work together to organize holiday gatherings for the Embassy community and friends. The annual Marine Birthday Ball is one of the highlights of the fall season, followed by the International Women’s Club (IWC) Charity Bazaar in early December. Opportunities abound to devote time to charity. Many institutions for orphans and handicapped welcome volunteeres. There are two English-speaking international clubs for women, the above-mentioned IWC, and the Women’s Network, made up chiefly of working women in Sofia. Official Functions Nature of FunctionsLast Updated:  12/2/2003 11:36 AM In Sofia, there ... [Read More]

Remarks With Bulgarian Foreign Minister Solomon Passy

FOREIGN MINISTER PASSY: (in Bulgarian) Good morning. It is a great pleasure for me to say good morning here in Bulgaria to Secretary of State Colin Powell, a great friend of ours, with whom we spent almost four full years, hand in hand as allies and friends. I want to thank him for all the support that he personally, and through him the US administration, provided to Bulgaria. Those were four exceptionally successful years. In the course of these years, Bulgaria conducted and finalized the NATO accession negotiations, finalized the negotiations with the E ... [Read More]

December
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