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SOFIA: First Day In Parliament: Ataka

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  • SOFIA: First Day In Parliament: Ataka

    FIRST DAY IN PARLIAMENT: ATAKA
    by Petar Kostadinov

    Sofia Echo
    http://www.sofiaecho.com/2009/07/14/754816_first- day-in-parliament-ataka
    July 14 2009
    Bulgaria

    In his opening speech at the first sitting of the 41st National
    Assembly on July 14 2009, ultra-nationalist Ataka party leader Volen
    Siderov targeted outgoing Prime Minister Sergei Stanishev, who is
    also leader of the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP), and Stanishev's
    coalition partner Ahmed Dogan, leader of the Movement for Rights and
    Freedoms (MRF).

    Referring to Stanishev's statement that he feared political repression
    now that his party was in opposition, Siderov said that it was
    Stanishev's Government that had used repression on pensioners and
    youngsters who had turned out to protest in the streets.

    "You turned the police into a repressive machine against people who
    were expressing their discontent with your rule," Siderov said.

    "You were the ones who conducted a policy of repression, using the
    support of the Turkish party, the MRF (which is supported mainly
    by Bulgarians of Turkish descent). This is a party which is direct
    descendant of a terrorist organisation which used to place bombs in
    the 1980s, and that promotes hatred," Siderov said.

    He was referring to the times when the then-communist regime in
    Bulgaria had a policy of changing the names of Bulgarians of ethnic
    Turkish descent and who were Muslims, forcing them to take Christian
    names. This led to underground resistance and terrorist attacks on
    train stations, in which a number of people died.

    According to Siderov, it was the MRF that promoted hatred
    through its statements and arrogant behaviour. He called on the
    Prosecutor-General's Office to investigate Dogan's words a few weeks
    ago that he was the instrument of power in Bulgaria who decided what
    money went where.

    Siderov asked Parliament to set up an ad-hoc committee to investigate
    breaches of electoral rules at polling stations in neighbouring Turkey
    and in areas of Bulgaria populated by Muslim Bulgarians.

    Siderov said that Ataka was ready to table four draft bills: condemning
    what Siderov termed the "genocide" suffered by the Bulgarian people
    during close to 500 years of Ottoman rule; asking Turkey to pay
    Bulgaria its debt owed to Bulgarian refugees who were forced to leave
    their land because of the Balkan Wars of the early 20th century;
    condemning the genocide suffered by Armenians under the Ottoman
    empire; and setting up an ad hoc committee on rules being broken
    during the elections.

    Siderov said that Ataka would work for the abolition of the
    Turkish-language daily news bulletins on public broadcaster Bulgarian
    National Television.
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