The European Commission issued a scathing indictment of corruption in Bulgaria today, suspending aid worth hundreds of millions of euros and barring two key payments agencies from receiving EU funds.
A report on the management of European Union funds by the latest and poorest EU member said the fight against high-level corruption and organised crime was not producing results and the Commission had to act to protect taxpayers' money.
"Therefore, the Commission has taken the decision today to formalise this suspension (of aid) and withdraw the accreditation for two government agencies in charge of managing these pre-accession funds," chief Commission spokesman Johannes Laitenberger told a news conference.
The two reports on Bulgaria -- one on funds and the other on judicial reform -- were the harshest criticism ever levelled by Brussels at a member state. A report on fellow newcomer Romania, which also joined the EU in January 2007, pointed to political and judicial obstruction of corruption trials but avoided sanctions.
Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso called them "a reality check -- they show that both the Bulgarian and Romanian governments need to step up their efforts on judicial reform, corruption and in the case of Bulgaria organised crime".
Analysts said the Commission was trying to set an example to other Balkan candidate countries and to reassure voters disenchanted with the 27-nation bloc's eastward enlargement.
"Reform of the judiciary and law enforcement structures is necessary and long overdue," the Commission said.
But the EU executive softened the blow at the last minute by toning down the tougher wording of earlier drafts and omitting a threat to delay Bulgaria's entry into the euro single currency zone and the Schengen area of passport-free travel.
And the reports were presented to the media by low-profile spokesmen rather than Mr Barroso or another political figure.
Mr Laitenberger gave no overall figure for the suspended funds, but it is believed that it could add up €486 million.
Those funds are mainly for the PHARE technical assistance programme for acceding countries, the ISPA road-building scheme and the SAPARD agricultural marketing plan.
The EU report did credit prime minister Sergei Stanishev's government with progress in setting up a national security agency to fight corruption and organised crime, and closing duty-free shops and petrol stations that were a focus of crime.
However, Bulgaria's rightist opposition asked parliament to hold a vote of no-confidence against the Socialist-led government, accusing it of failure to stop fraud with EU funds.
The vote, the sixth against the government, is unlikely to topple the three-party coalition which has an overwhelming majority in parliament, but could further dent its eroding popularity ahead of 2009 elections, commentators said.
Reuters