Bulgaria's image suffers as crime flourishes

Sun May 11, 2008 7:55am BST
 
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By Anna Mudeva

SOFIA (Reuters) - Little over a year after joining the rich boys' club, European Union newcomer Bulgaria has seen its reputation hit a low, marred by its failure to tame chronic graft and crime.

Some investors say the situation in the Balkan country has become worse than in neighbouring Romania, ranked the most corrupt EU nation by Transparency International. Investing in Bulgaria without paying bribes or encountering the mafia is almost impossible, they say.

Economists say corruption is damaging Bulgaria's investment image and competitiveness.

"It hasn't prevented investment but clearly it is a concern," said Jon Levy, an analyst at Eurasia Group.

"It probably makes Bulgaria less competitive in comparison even to some other destinations in eastern Europe," he said.

With the incentive of EU membership gone, Sofia and Bucharest have succumbed to reform fatigue. Their anti-corruption efforts are also stymied by hesitant policy-makers, political feuds and inefficient state administration.

Sceptical EU members question the decision to let the two nations join the bloc so early and are pushing Brussels to impose sanctions against Sofia, whose list of misdeeds is mounting: More than 150 unsolved high-profile contract killings this decade; suspected fraud with EU funds and police officers passing secrets to drug traffickers; failure to charge a single high-level official with corruption.

Even U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has said any failure to address graft and organized crime could jeopardize Bulgaria's future cooperation with the EU.  Continued...

 
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