Bulgaria murder

Опубликовано: 09 Апрель 2008

A Bulgarian author who specialized in organized crime was fatally shot on Monday afternoon in Sofia, news agencies reported.

Georgi Stoyev, 56, a former bodyguard and gang member who had written non-fiction books on the beginnings of the Bulgarian mafia and organized crime operations, was shot in the head by unknown gunmen outside a Sofia hotel at around noon on Monday. He was hospitalized in critical condition and died of his wounds following brain surgery. His attackers escaped in heavy downtown traffic.

Stoyev’s murder occurred within 24 hours of the fatal shooting of the head of a large Bulgarian energy company. Borislav Georgiev, the chief executive officer of a company that maintains the reactors at the Kozlodui nuclear plant, was killed by unknown gunmen in front of his home.

Local observers have noted that the shootings appear to be part of a string of score-settling attacks, killings and bombings that have claimed more than 100 lives in the past few years.

Bulgaria, which joined the European Union in 2007, has been frequently criticized for its failure to tackle domestic corruption and organized crime. Both Bulgaria and its neighbor Romania faced an EU-imposed special corruption monitoring scheme when they joined the now 27-nation Union in January 2007. On Tuesday, in the wake of the killings, the EU called on Bulgaria to take “urgent action” to fight organized crime. The European Commission said the killings were not just another statistic. The EU has already frozen some of its infrastructure subsidies for Bulgaria. Agencies have reported that pressure may be growing to impose other sanctions to confront the organized crime problem in the country.

EU experts are slated to visit Bulgaria next week for a report due in July on Bulgaria’s progress towards eradicating contract killings and corruption.