Bulgarians Vow To Continue Protests Against Government Corruption

Thousands of Bulgarians held a fourth day of protests in Sofia and several other cities on July 12 against government corruption and said more similar rallies are scheduled to take place July 13 ahead of another nationwide protest later in the week.
Thousands of people filled a central area in Sofia near the presidency and the Council of Ministers demanding the resignation of the conservative government. Protests also took place in Burgas, Plovdiv, Varna, Blagoevgrad, and Gabrovo, according to a Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reporter.
In Sofia, Burgas, and Varna, the protests turned into marches, with people shouting "Resign!," "Mafia!," and demanding the ouster of Prosecutor-General Ivan Geshev.
The protests were sparked by a raid on July 9 by the Prosecutor-General's Office on the presidential headquarters.
President Rumen Radev's legal affairs and anti-corruption secretary and his security and defense adviser were detained for questioning and their offices searched as part of two separate probes into influence-peddling and disclosure of state secrets.
Demonstrations
The searches sparked public anger and brought thousands of demonstrators onto the streets of Sofia to condemn the raids as an attack by the government and the prosecutor-general against Radev.
Radev responded two days later by calling on the government and the prosecutor-general to step down.
The searches came after Radev said the National Protection Service (NSO) -- which is responsible for guarding the president, prime minister, and other high officials -- should stop protecting Ahmed Dogan, the honorary chairman of the Movement for Rights and Freedoms (DPS).
Protesters were also angered when people were barred from a state beach located near Dogan’s summer residence. Access to the beach was restored on July 11 under pressure from the center-right Democratic Bulgaria opposition.
Radev is an outspoken critic of the cabinet of Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, accusing it of "links with oligarchs."
Borisov has refused to resign but opponents launched an online petition aiming to gather as many as 1 million signatures to demand his ouster.
The Socialist opposition in parliament also said on July 12 that they would propose a no-confidence motion against the cabinet for "corruption" on July 15 and appealed to protesters to back them. The protesters say their nationwide demonstration will take place the next day.
Latest news
Latest newsUzbekistan Bets on Georgian Ports as Tashkent Expands Its Trade Route to European Markets via the Black Sea
14.Jul.2026
Turkmenistan and the USA Explore New Areas of Cooperation as Ashgabat Hosts U.S. Senator Steve Daines
13.Jul.2026
Engineers Instead of Soldiers: Kazakhstan Hosts Its First Engineering Technologies Championship
12.Jul.2026
Transit Instead of Confrontation: Russia Expands Cargo Shipments to Armenia via Azerbaijan
12.Jul.2026
Europe Accelerates Rearmament: EU Countries Prioritize Missiles, Air Defense Systems, and Drones
10.Jul.2026
Russia Begins Using New FPV Drones to Strike Ukraine's Energy Infrastructure
10.Jul.2026
US Ready to Lift Sanctions on Turkiye and Restore Its Participation in the F-35 Program
09.Jul.2026
Trump Announces Transfer of License to Ukraine for Patriot Interceptor Missile Production
09.Jul.2026
The NATO Summit in Ankara Marked a New Stage in the Alliance's Transformation
08.Jul.2026
The war in Ukraine - the “liberation of Novorossiya” is a mission impossible
07.Jul.2026

18 Jul 2026


