Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Hundreds of Romanian tourists invade the Bulgarian sea coast

According to the hotel reservations and the coastal rental agents, hundreds of Romanian tourists will visit the Bulgarian sea coast this Easter. Having in mind that the weather in Bulgaria is already warm enough, most of them come to enjoy the holiday near the beautiful Black Sea and to celebrate in the nice resorts.

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source: bulgarianpropertiesmarket.com

10 000 Romanians Flock to Bulgaria's Seaside during Weekend

More than 10 000 Romanian tourists flocked at Bulgaria's seaside to spend the weekend and the next two non-working days at the coast of the Black Sea, Darik News reported. While Romanians come to Bulgaria to spend the long weekend days, more than a half of the hotels at the Romanian Black Sea coast remain closed. Since 1990 the Romanians see May 1, the International Labour Day, as the start of the summer season, but the Romanian hotel owners still open their hotels at the beginning of June. The mass invasion of the Bulgarian coastal resorts by the Romanians started in 2005 and experts expect it will reach its visitors peak this year. The first Romanian tourists that arrived in the Albena resort said they were happy to go as the price is much lower in Bulgaria for a three-day stay in a four stars hotel.

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source: bulgarianpropertiesmarket.com

The Flood of Bulgarians, Romanians "Failed to Materialise"

The feared flood of workers from Bulgaria and Romania failed to materialise at Heathrow airport yesterday as citizens of the European Union's two newest member states appeared to prefer to stay at home, The Independent wrote in commentary of the countries' accession. "The cameras were ready. Reporters stood poised to intercept the vanguard of Britain's latest invasion from eastern Europe. The only thing missing was the migrants." The article cites a photographer for a red-top newspaper, who said: "Complete waste of time. No one wanted to fly. We even offered to help with the fare."

FULL text of the article:

By Cahal Milmo The Independent

The cameras were ready. Reporters stood poised to intercept the vanguard of Britain's latest invasion from eastern Europe. The only thing missing was the migrants. The feared flood of workers from Bulgaria and Romania failed to materialise at Heathrow airport yesterday as citizens of the European Union's two newest member states appeared to prefer to stay at home. Flights arriving at terminal one from Bucharest yesterday carried visitors from the Indian sub-continent and crestfallen representatives of certain newspapers who had been sent to the Romanian capital to chronicle the expected influx, only to find no takers. As one photographer for a red-top newspaper put it: "Complete waste of time. No one wanted to fly. We even offered to help with the fare." The slow start to what one campaign group has said it expects to be a wave of 180,000 UK-bound Romanians and Bulgarians in 2007 was greeted by some as proof that the flood - according to some more alarmist reports likely to include HIV-infected teenagers, Bulgarian gangsters and child thieves - is going to be more of a trickle. The Government is offering 22,000 work permits to citizens from both countries after refusing to grant an unrestricted right to work in the UK following the arrival of 600,000 migrant workers from new EU members such as Poland in 2004. The Home Office has refused to give a projection of how Romanian and Bulgarian workers it expects. But Simona Tatulescu, a Romanian tax expert who arrived in Britain in 2002 and works as a consultant advising new migrants, said: "When people return to their offices this week expecting to see lots of Romanian plasterers or Bulgarian cleaners, they will be disappointed. "The people who want to come here want a better life and they want to achieve it by setting up their own business or working for themselves. They don't want to come here to live on benefit and be miserable. "If they come to do a more basic job, such as agricultural work, then they are not here to stay. They are fulfilling a demand to do very hard physical work and then returning home." The high cost of flying from Bulgaria and Romania, where the average wage is about £150 per month, as well as the celebration of the Orthodox Christmas this week means that many of those planning to come to Britain will not travel until mid-January. A new budget airline, Wizz Air, starts direct flights from Bucharest to Luton on 15 January with its cheapest fare costing £35. Travel by coach from Bucharest and the Bulgarian capital, Sofia, which takes up to three days, is cheaper. Among those who have already arrived, there was a mixture of enthusiasm for the higher wages in Britain and bemusement over the concerns in their host country at their arrival. The Government launched an advertising campaign in Romania and Bulgaria before Christmas warning that anyone wanting to come to the UK would need a work permit and those breaking the rule face a £1,000 fine. Ion Gabriel, 35, had given up his job in Bucharest as an insurance clerk to work on a flower farm in Surrey. He said: "I've come to work for six months. I'm very happy - the work will be hard but the money will be good. I will then go back to university in Bucharest. Romania is my home, I don't want to stay in Britain. "What is so wrong with people like me coming here to work? It is work that the British don't want to do." It is a question which Britain's horticulturists, who contribute £1.76bn a year to the economy, are also asking. Under new rules brought in by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, a long-standing permit scheme for agricultural workers must give 40 per cent of its places to Bulgarian and Romanian citizens. From next year, all 16,500 places on the seasonal agricultural workers' schemes must be first offered to Bulgarians and Romanians. But critics say that it is unclear whether there are enough Bulgarians or Romanians who want to come to Britain to meet the demand. Martin Howarth, director of policy for the National Farmers' Union, said: "The new rules have thrown a system that worked extremely well into chaos. Last year, there were dramatically fewer Bulgarian and Romanian workers than the 40 per cent mark. "Farmers are scratching their heads about what will happen when that quota reaches 100 per cent. It is a complete mess."

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source: bulgarianpropertiesmarket.com

World Bank Lends Bulgaria EUR 90 M for Transport Infrastructure Upgrades

World Bank's board of directors approved EUR 90 M in funding for a project to upgrade transport infrastructure in Bulgaria, the institution said on Wednesday. The funds will be used to rehabilitate first, second and third class roads with total a length of 450 kilometres. Part of the money will be invested in buying new equipment and improving the capacity of Bulgarian institutions to use available resources more effectively. The loan, which has 17-year-long maturity, will help improve road security and decrease the number of the accidents in the country.

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source: bulgarianpropertiesmarket.com

USD 800 M of Japan Investments in Bulgaria in 17 Years

Japan has invested around USD 800 M in Bulgaria after the start of the transition from communism in 1990, the Japanese Ambassador to the country Kuichiro Fukui said on Thursday. The money was mostly allocated for strengthening of the democracy and the development of the Bulgarian market economy, he added. Japanese investments in Bulgaria are insignificant compared to investment in the other Eastern European countries. In the past four years there is a significant revival of the bilateral relations and the three big Japanese projects in the country prove that, Fukui said. Those are the Tokuda hospital, the wind power plant park on Cape Kaliakra and the recently purchased land near Yambol, where a Japanese company plans to build a factory for car parts

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source: bulgarianpropertiesmarket.com