Bulgarian journalist Christo Grozev, working for Bellingcat, has been declared a wanted man in Russia, the website of the Russian Interior Ministry showed.
In July, the FSB announced on the air of "Russia-24" TV channel that Grozev participated in an attempt to hijack Su-24, Su-34 and Tu-22 M3 jets by giving money at the behest of Kyiv to Russian pilots.
Grozev has won numerous journalism awards for investigations into crimes committed by Russian services and denies the allegations. He has been working for the Belgian site Bellingcat since 2015. In an interview with AFP the journalist said that the site's reports were "the Kremlin's worst nightmare."
According to the regular sociological survey by Gallup International Balkans in January 2025, society has moderate expectations for positive changes in Europe and Bulgaria from the policies of the new US President Donald Trump. 30.4%..
The Bulgarian Cultural Institute in London is covering all the costs for the festive concert-performance that will mark the national holiday. The concert will be held at the Ondaatje Theatre, Royal Geographical Society on March 1,..
Bulgaria has received encouraging signals at the Eurogroup meeting. "The country has made even greater progress in fulfilling the price stability criterion," said European Commissioner for the Economy Valdis Dombrovskis. When..
The Bulgarian Ministry of Tourism will work to create a map of important, but hard-to-reach tourist and cultural-historical sites. The goal is then to..
Bulgarian Finance Minister Temenuzhka Petkova will travel to Brussels to provide an update on Bulgaria’s progress towards euro area accession. The..
Bulgaria’s President Rumen Radev named Sofia Airport after the Apostle of Freedom Vasil Levski, the press secretariat of the head of state announced...
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