Bulgarian gov't resigns after violent protests

 
No Author Published: February 20, 2013    Comment on this article Leave a comment

SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) — Elena Hristova, a 73-year-old retiree, had always paid her bills on time.

But when she received an electricity bill that amounted to 60 percent of her monthly pension, she'd had enough. So she joined a recent anti-government protest and did something she never had before: she burned an unpaid bill.

photo - Riot police form up after clashes with demonstrators after  a protest against high electricity prices in Sofia, on late Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013.  Bulgaria's prime minister announced on Tuesday that the license held by a Czech company for power distribution in parts of the Balkan country will be revoked following protests against high electricity prices. (AP Photo/Valentina Petrova)
Riot police form up after clashes with demonstrators after a protest against high electricity prices in Sofia, on late Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013. Bulgaria's prime minister announced on Tuesday that the license held by a Czech company for power distribution in parts of the Balkan country will be revoked following protests against high electricity prices. (AP Photo/Valentina Petrova)

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"I didn't have much money to live on" she said.

Hristova was among tens of thousands of Bulgarians who protested for days in cities across the country, some violently, in outrage over rising energy costs, corruption and a general economic decline in what is already the European Union's poorest nation.

As a result, the center-right government of Prime Minister Boiko Borisov resigned on Wednesday.

"Our power was handed to us by the people. Today we are handing it back to them," Borisov told lawmakers in Parliament before formally submitting the resignation of his Cabinet. "I cannot stand looking at a bloody Eagles' Bridge," he added, referring to the busy intersection in downtown Sofia where police and protesters had clashed Tuesday.

"Every drop of blood is a shame for us."

Parliament Speaker Tsetska Tsacheva said legislators will vote on the resignation Thursday, though that appears to be largely a formality.

Early elections are now expected in April or May.

Tens of thousands of protesters across the country hit the streets last weekend to protest rising electricity and heating bills. Shouting "Mafia," they accused their leaders of ties to crime. Some threw eggs and tomatoes at government buildings in Sofia, the capital.

Hristova was among hundreds who burned utility bills in public, accusing the government of failing to improve their falling living standards and demanding the expulsion of the three foreign-controlled power distributors that control the local market: CEZ and Energo-Pro from the Czech Republic, and Austria's EVN.

Some protesters demanded that the country nationalize the utility companies.

The protests were mostly peaceful at first, but they turned violent on Sunday and even more so on Tuesday evening, when people hurled stones and bottles at police.

Police in riot gear responded by clubbing protesters. At least 15 were injured, and TV footage from the scene showed some demonstrators with head wounds.

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