site.btaCaretaker Justice Minister Pavlova Halts Draft Amendments Introducing Residence Qualifications for Voters
Caretaker Justice Minister Pavlova Halts Draft Amendments Introducing Residence Qualifications for Voters
 
 Sofia, April 5 (BTA) - Bulgaria's caretaker Justice Minister Maria  Pavlova has dismissed Lyubomir Talev as head of the Council on  Legislation Directorate and halted a Bill to Supplement the Bulgarian  Citizenship Act, which was posted Monday evening on the Ministry's  website for public consultation, the Justice Ministry said in a press  release on Wednesday.
 
 The version of the draft legislation that appeared online would  introduce three-month residence qualifications for voting in  parliamentary and presidential elections.
 
 The Ministry found that Talev acted intentionally, aiming to discredit  the institution, because the bill published for public consultation had  not been consulted with the Ministry. 
 
 The Ministry said it was suspending the public consultation of the bill  because Pavlova had detected flaws in the formulations and in the  reasons and because it is inconsistent with the Constitution.
 
 The draft that was initially prepared by Justice Ministry experts  envisaged that the residence qualifications rules would make express  provisions enabling Bulgarians resident in all EU Member State to  exercise their voting rights. 
 
 President Implicated
 
 The "24 Chassa" daily quotes Talev as saying that the controversial  amendments were written by Emilia Droumeva, who is Legal Secretary to  President Rumen Radev and a former Constitutional Court member. The  dismissed director said that the bill arrived from the Administration of  the President last week, was finalized by April 3, after which it was  cleared with the Council of Ministers so as to make an impact  assessment, was signed by Deputy Justice Minister Denitsa Mitrova, and  Talev merely published it for public consultation. He was positive that  the draft legislation was cleared with Justice Minister Pavlova as well.
 
 The "Dnevnik" daily also quotes Talev, who said that the amendments were  discussed on Monday at a meeting with the participation of Radev and  Droumeva. Approached by the daily for comment, Droumeva says she has  seen various versions of the revisions coming from various  central-government departments. "A version providing for three-month  residence qualifications for all elections has not reached me," she told  "Dnevnik". The President's Legal Secretary pointed out that "these are  very early drafts" and that "the National Assembly will have the final  say on adoption". She decline to comment on the substance of the idea to  require three months' residence from expat voters. 
 
 Round Up of Reaction
 
 "GERB insist on the immediate withdrawal of the draft amendments to the  Election Code and on a cancellation of its public consultation," former  justice minister Ekaterina Zaharieva told a news conference on  Wednesday.
 
 While the news conference was in progress, the bill was withdrawn and  the party expressed its satisfaction and hope that the caretaker Cabinet  will not reintroduce is next month.
 
 GERB argued that the provisions on residence qualifications for voting  in parliamentary and presidential elections affect the rights of  millions of Bulgarian citizens. "It is inadmissible that such revisions  should be made by a caretaker cabinet and even by a regular government,"  Zaharieva said. "Instead of integrating Bulgarian citizens, we deprive  them of rights," she added.
 
 The former justice minister noted that GERB is trying to reach agreement  with the United Patriots on the introduction of a full-fledged  majoritarian election system, as decided by the November 2016 national  referendum. The coalition agreement will clearly spell out the  commitments in all policies.
 
 "It's none of a caretaker cabinet's business to address issues related  to election legislation," former foreign minister Kristian Vigenin said  at an extraordinary news conference at the Bulgarian Socialist Party  (BSP) headquarters. He welcomed the decision to withdraw the bill  amending the Bulgarian Citizenship Act.
 
 Vigenin pointed out that these subjects need to be formulated very  accurately so as to guarantee that, on the one hand, the constitutional  rights of Bulgarian citizens resident abroad would be preserved and  safeguarded and, on the other, to ensure that any attempts at external  interference with the election process in Bulgaria would be thwarted.
 
 According to Socialist MP Valeri Zhablyanov, bilateral relations between  Bulgaria and Turkey rather than the dual nationality held by emigrants  from Bulgaria is the cause for tensions in the domestic political  process in Bulgaria. "The issue about the dual nationality must be  raised in the context of Bulgarian-Turkish relations, and talks must be  held with the Turkish State," he pointed out.
 
 Bulgaria's former Ambassador to the UN Stefan Tafrov said on BiT  television that the proposed amendments to the Election Code restrict  the constitutional rights of Bulgarian citizens permanently settled  abroad which excludes them from the political process. Tafrov stressed  that his personal opinion is identical with the opinion of the Yes,  Bulgaria Party, which Wednesday published a declaration taking strong  exception to the bill. "Nobody dares take political responsibility for  this hostile act against expatriate Bulgarians," Tafrov noted. "We  should not forget that the Bulgarian citizens living in Turkey are there  because they were expelled by the Bulgarian communist regime in the  1980s. Instead of integrating them with Bulgaria and keeping their ties  with Bulgaria, we regard them as enemies and facilitate their political  encapsulation," the diplomat argued.
 
 The number of eligible voters among expatriate Bulgarians is estimated  at 1 million. Out of 117,000 expats who voted in the March 26  parliamentary elections, 33,077 did so in Turkey. Of the 104,000 who  cast ballots abroad in the November 2016 presidential elections, 39,000  went to the polls in Turkey. For years now, immigrants living in Turkey  have been bussed to Bulgaria in large numbers expressly for the  elections. This proved a major issue this year, after the nationalist  United Patriots attempted to block the border crossings in a bid to  prevent the expats' entry.
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