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   In 1989 the Communist regime forced more than 300.000 of Bulgaria's ethnic Turks to leave the country within weeks, causing Europe's largest single exodus after the end of WWII. Dr. Georgi Simidchiev was a young scientist in the capital Sofia and was caught up in bigger events, away from his desk.

Bulgaria, January 1997

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Nikoga veche...", "Never again Communism", a popular song at the mass student-led rallies throughout January 1997 in the Bulgarian capital Sofia. The country was facing an overall political crisis.

Tens of thousands of people were protesting daily against the government of former Communist (now Socialist) Zhan Videnov, and calling for early elections... Outside the party headquarters of his BSP protesters would shout "Mafia" and "Red rubbish", throw eggs, pieces of bread, sometimes stones at the building. Under Zhan Videnov the BSP government failed to implement economic reforms, the banking system was on the verge of collapse, inflation was at 300%, corruption rampant, and average wages at no more than US $30 a month.

Leaders of the opposition Union of Democratic Forces made it clear that parliamentary means to resolve the present crisis have been virtually exhausted. On 10 January the protesters blocked the about 100 Socialist members of Parliament from leaving the building.

(personal archive)
  

In the early evening protesters stormed the building, smashing windows and causing some damage to the interior. At dawn, the BSP members of parliament were led out by riot police through back doors and escorted on army buses, while the remaining protesters near the building were dispersed by police and beaten up, some of them badly. Over 200 demonstrators were sent to hospital for emergency treatment that night.

The response was: mass strikes, nightly marches and road blocks across the country. Bulgaria was for the first time in its recent history the focus of the world media. Reuters Sofia-correspondent at the time, Thalia Griffiths, explains this attention with the significance of the events:

"The uprising was much more dramatic than the Belgrade protests, taking place at the same time. Bulgaria is not a country where people throw stones at the Parliament every day. I think there was a tremendous sense of anger, a sense that something had to be done. It was a very dramatic event. What struck me most was the fact that really everybody was on the street. It was not just students or political activists. There were also senior citizens and parents with their teenage kids out demonstrating."

Eventually, on 4 February, the BSP agreed to hold early elections. A caretaker cabinet appointed by the new President Petar Stoyanov served till the elections in April 1997. The vote brought a landslide victory for the pro-reform forces of the United Democratic Forces coalition.

Few would disagree that the fall of Videnov's cabinet in 1997 saved Bulgaria from a deepening crisis. His party colleagues however to this day prefer to remember their effort to save the 'civil peace' in Bulgaria.

The response was: mass strikes, nightly marches and road blocks across the country. Bulgaria was for the first time in its recent history the focus of the world media. Reuters Sofia-correspondent at the time, Thalia Griffiths, explains this attention with the significance of the events:

"The uprising was much more dramatic than the Belgrade protests, taking place at the same time. Bulgaria is not a country where people throw stones at the Parliament every day. I think there was a tremendous sense of anger, a sense that something had to be done. It was a very dramatic event. What struck me most was the fact that really everybody was on the street. It was not just students or political activists. There were also senior citizens and parents with their teenage kids out demonstrating."

Eventually, on 4 February, the BSP agreed to hold early elections. A caretaker cabinet appointed by the new President Petar Stoyanov served till the elections in April 1997. The vote brought a landslide victory for the pro-reform forces of the United Democratic Forces coalition.

Few would disagree that the fall of Videnov's cabinet in 1997 saved Bulgaria from a deepening crisis. His party colleagues however to this day prefer to remember their effort to save the 'civil peace' in Bulgaria.

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