site.btaInterior Minister Vouchkov: Just One in Six Municipalities Has Video Surveillance
Interior Minister Vouchkov: Just One in Six Municipalities Has Video Surveillance
 
 Plovdiv, South Central Bulgaria, November 30 (BTA) - Interior 
 Minister Vesselin Vouchkov said on Sunday that just one sixth of
 Bulgaria's municipalities have video surveillance cameras. He 
 was in Maritsa Municipality which has piloted a video 
 surveillance project. It started with eight CCTV cameras in 
 seven villages in 2013. Since then, crime has dropped 30 per 
 cent, said Plamen Ouzounov, Regional Director of the Interior in
 Plovdiv.
 
 Vouchkov praised the project as an example of valuable 
 cooperation between the State, represented by the Interior 
 Ministry and the police, and the regional authorities. He said 
 he was scheduled to meet with the leadership of the National 
 Association of Municipalities in mid-December to discuss a 
 single approach to the installation of such systems across the 
 country. It should be clear who finances the project and 
 maintains the cameras and who is in charge of the interaction 
 between the police and local government. In a year this approach
 may gather speed and be put into practice across the country, 
 said Vouchkov, adding that the regional authorities would 
 provide the bulk of the financing.
 
 Maritsa Municipality invested public money to the amount of 
 30,000 leva in the video surveillance project.
 
 Vouchkov also said that stationary and mobile cameras would be 
 installed around Bulgaria, including for road traffic control. 
 He stressed the number one challenge now was to amend the Road 
 Traffic Act to comply with the interpretive ruling of the 
 Supreme Administrative Court and ensure the legal use of mobile 
 cameras issuing electronic tickets for traffic offences. There 
 are 148 cameras in storage now and if 150 more are added, 
 traffic police patrols will become superfluous, said Vouchkov.
news.modal.header
news.modal.text