Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Human resources or who will put through the judicial reform in Bulgaria

Human resources, the awful bureaucratic coinage that gave the name to an EU-funded project, seems to be looming large as Bulgaria’s biggest problem. Two Bulgarian prime ministers put it in more understandable terms. Simeon Saxe-Coburg-Gotha was the first when he let it slip that Bulgarians should “change the chip in their heads” i.e. their mind-set. At a meeting with Bulgarians in USA, current Prime Minister Boyko Borissov said, in his own inimitable style, that the reforms had ground to a halt because “the material was poor”. And perhaps they were both right.

At the beginning of the week Borissov once again made it clear he was going ahead with the reform in the judiciary. And as the judicial reform has been in everybody’s mouth these past 20 years it is, perhaps, time we took a look at who should be putting this reform through in Bulgaria. Because one side of the reform is the “paper”, the laws MPs set down in text. The next, essential step of the judicial reform is to actually put it through, and in this the “protagonists” are the magistrates.  
During the week the National Audit Office released lists of verified discrepancies, ascertained in income and asset declarations submitted by topofficials and other people holding public office. The lists made public 278 instances of inconsistencies between the information submitted to the public register and the real assets and incomes of party functionaries, members of national and local administrations and magistrates and their families. More than 40 percent of the people who have forgotten to declare their property and incomes are investigating magistrates, prosecutors or judges. In this list names of magistrates who have forgotten to declare sums ranging from EUR 10,000 to 45,000 stand out like a sore thumb. In the poorest country of the EU these are appreciable sums, with the average monthly salary standing at around EUR 400, and a magistrate’s salary – no more than EUR 2,000. How long would it take the president of a court, for example, to save up 45,000, this being just a portion of his or her incomes? The portion these people have conveniently chosen to omit in their declarations? It would be no long shot to say the source of such sums was dubious. But it is people with such incomes (and moral standing) that now hold the key to the lifting of the Mechanism for Cooperation and Verification imposed on Bulgaria by Brussels, a fact that is a trifle insulting to the country, one of the conditions for which is precisely the reform in the judiciary. The judicial system in Bulgaria is in the grip of an elite that was formed in the very first years after the changes in 1898. An elite that is fully satisfied with the status quo and would never, in a million years allow it to change. And this is no surprise – the judicial system is the most atrophied part of life in post-communist Bulgaria, the sector where democratic change is slowest because over the 45 years of communist rule, it simply did not exist. The change of generations that ought to engender the judicial system’s inner need to change is going ahead at a painfully slow pace, which means that the long-cherished dream of reforming the judiciary will go ahead just as slowly and painfully.

English version: Milena Daynova




Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Sevar Ognyanov

Bulgarians in Greece - fewer and increasingly apathetic at the polls

There are 23 polling stations where Bulgarians can vote in Greece today. They are five less than their number in the previous election on June 9 this year. The most sections – five – were opened on the island of Crete . They are located in..

published on 10/27/24 4:27 PM
D-r Tsvetan Tsenkov

A pediatrician is the chairman of the only polling station in Kuwait

Completely calm and normal, according to the law, the election day is taking place in the only open polling station in Kuwait. The Bulgarian community in the Arab country numbers about 300-350 people , mostly highly educated specialists in the fields..

published on 10/27/24 2:50 PM
The polling station in Brisbane

The Bulgarians living "Down Under" give their vote for hope

"The last one to quit wins. If we believe and want democracy in Bulgaria to win..., we must persevere, even though it's discouraging," Izabela Shopova from Brisbane, Australia tells Radio Bulgaria Nearly 6,000 people identified themselves as..

published on 10/27/24 2:05 PM