Bulgarian corruption is a cancer in the EU’s body politic that will only grow more serious
Bulgaria’s experience reveals the lie in the European Union's claim to have a transformative, purifying effect on the politics of new member states
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Your support makes all the difference.At about 7.30am on 20 February, a youthful figure with auburn hair to his shoulders presented himself before the Mayor’s office in the city of Varna, Bulgaria, with a banner and a gas canister. Plamen Goranov, 36, had been a leading activist in protests against political corruption that have galvanised the EU’s poorest member state this year. That morning, he sat down in front of the office on a white sheet, shouted out his demand that Mayor Kiril Yordanov resign, poured paraffin over himself and set it alight. Eleven days later, he died.
Two days after that, Mr Yordanov did as Mr Goranov had demanded. And soon after that, Prime Minister Boiko Borisov, whom the protesters also accused of flagrant corruption, went the same way, which is why Bulgaria is going to the polls on Sunday, months ahead of schedule.
Plamen Goranov, in other words, and the four other Bulgarian activists who killed themselves in the same way in February and March, achieved what years of tortuous and expensive scrutiny by the European Union prior to Bulgaria’s admission failed to: they threw a harsh light on the rotten state of Bulgarian politics, and forced it to change.
Bulgaria and Romania went through the motions of renouncing communism after the fall of the Berlin Wall, but the reforms were cosmetic, and most of the party nomenklatura managed to cling on. Nothing substantive has changed since then, and today this entrenched and rotten elite dominate parliament and the economy, just like in the bad old days; they intimidate the media and are believed to be in league with organised crime.
All this constitutes a serious problem for the EU, a cancer in the union’s body politic that is bound to grow more serious with the passage of time. One of the EU’s strongest propaganda points is that when it expands it has a transformative effect on a new member state, not only electrifying its economy but also purifying its politics and imposing modern values on its society. Bulgaria’s experience proves the claim to be threadbare. British Eurosceptics blame the union for poking its nose into our affairs, but when such interference is actually meaningful – when an applicant state is at the door, cap in hand, and Brussels really has some leverage – it has, in the case of Bulgaria and Romania, signally failed to jump-start radical reform.
Mr Goranov’s comrades link his name with Jan Palach, the Czech hero of 1969 who burned himself to death after the invasion by Soviet tanks, and Mohamed Bouazizi, the Tunisian street vendor whose self-immolation sparked the Arab Spring. In the same breath, they should also recall Thupten Ngodup, an exile in Delhi and the first Tibetan to die this way, back in 1998, anticipating by more than a decade the 100 and more Tibetans who have chosen the same end. But Ngodup’s death was no more efficacious against the Chinese behemoth than was Palach’s against the Soviets.
Serious hunger strikes, such as the ones at the Maze prison in Northern Ireland in 1981 and the ones in progress in Guantanamo Bay, are self-immolations in slow motion, the slowness dictated either by a desire to leave options open or by lack of access to paraffin and matches. But every determined hunger strike, like every self-immolation, is a garish sign of political failure: in civilised countries, no confrontation should ever come to such a pass.
That’s why the resignation of the Mayor of Varna and the Prime Minister of Bulgaria was the correct response to the Bulgarian deaths. That’s why Margaret Thatcher’s failure to find an alternative solution to the Maze stand-off than the slow, agonising deaths of Bobby Sands and the other nine IRA prisoners – her deafness to the necessity of finding a solution – will never be forgiven or forgotten. And it’s why the endless impasse over Guantanamo, where 100 of the 166 prisoners are on hunger strike, and 23 of them are being force fed, is such a scandal. That so few Americans find it a cause for concern makes it even more so.
Soft side of the rough and tumble
Breakthrough turned into breakneck when Imran Khan fell off a forklift that was elevating him to yet another Pakistani election campaign appearance on Tuesday. But, after doctors sewed him up, he was back in the race, urging from his hospital bed that supporters go out and vote for his Tehreek-e-Insaf party in this weekend’s polls.
Despite his cricketing fame, his looks and his commitment, Khan has previously failed to make inroads into the vast vote banks of the two major parties, but with the Pakistan People’s Party flagging badly in the absence of a charismatic candidate to rank with its murdered leader, Benazir Bhutto, 2013 is his big opportunity.
He is up against the roly-poly Nawaz Sharif, the so-called “Lion of the Punjab”, whose second spell as prime minister was cut short by the Musharraf coup. Democracy in Pakistan is a rough and ready affair, even more so this time with the Pakistani Taliban using the simple stratagem of assassinating candidates it dislikes to engineer a favourable result.
A different mode of behaviour was demonstrated this week when Nawaz reacted to Imran’s tumble by sending a note of sympathy and cancelling a rally, and President Asif Ali Zardari sent flowers. Might this sort of cricket-like behaviour catch on?
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