[05SOFIA1239] BULGARIA: EXTREME NATIONALIST PARTY ENTERS PARLIAMENT

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Published by Wikileaks & Bivol.bg
 date: 7/12/2005 12:29 refid: 05SOFIA1239 origin: Embassy Sofia classification: UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY destination: 05SOFIA1134|05SOFIA1217 header: This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.   UNCLAS  SOFIA 001239    SIPDIS      SENSITIVE    E.O. 12958: N/A  TAGS: PGOV, PINR, BU  SUBJECT: BULGARIA: EXTREME NATIONALIST PARTY ENTERS  PARLIAMENT    Ref: (A) SOFIA 1134, (B) SOFIA 1217    1. (SBU) SUMMARY: The extreme nationalist political group  Ataka (Attack) won 8.7 percent of the vote in June's general  election and became the fourth largest political party in  the new parliament which commenced in Sofia July 11.  If, as  expected, the first three parties form a coalition  government, this will make Ataka the largest single  opposition party in parliament.  The group is strongly anti-  U.S. and anti-EU.  Under the slogan "Let's Give Bulgaria  Back to Bulgarians", it won 21 seats in the 240-seat  parliament, ahead of all three parties on the fragmented  center-right.  Hardships of the post-communist transition  led to much of the protest vote of over 300,000 Bulgarians.  Ataka leader Volen Siderov, a well-known journalist, is  oenly anti-Semitic.  His statements inciting hatredagainst  the Turkish and Roma populations succesfully exploited  negative attiudes among some Bulgarians towards the ethnic  minorities.  However, many Ataka supporters seemed to be as  excited about the prospect of a new, tough-talking, anti-  politician as by the actual message.  The surprise victory  of this newly-formed group has shocked Bulgaria, a country  with a reputation of ethnic tolerance.  END SUMMARY    2. (U) National Union Ataka, set up in May, 2005, is a  coalition of five marginal groups previously not represented  in parliament:  -- Siderov launched the Ataka political party in April 2005  "to stimulate Bulgaria's national dignity."  Ataka does not  yet have a grass-roots organization.  Its web site features  a map of Bulgaria covered with Turkish and Israeli flags as  well as numerous anti-Semitic articles, articles inciting  hatred against Bulgarian Roma and Turkish minorities, and  articles denouncing the U.S., EU and NATO.  -- Former security and defense officers fired by Ivan  Kostov's center-right government launched the Union of  Patriotic Forces and Reserve Officers "Zashtita"  (Protection) in 1998.  It also includes former Bulgarian  Socialist Party (BSP) activists who disagree with the BSP  reformist course.  -- The Zora political circle are mostly communists with  nationalist views and ties to the unreformed wing of the  BSP.  Zora's mouthpiece, Nova Zora newspaper, is strongly  anti-US and promotes ties with Russia and the Orthodox Slav  nations.  Since the establishment of Ataka, the Nova Zora  weekly has acted as its mouthpiece as well.  -- The little known National Movement for Salvation of the  Homeland and the Bulgarian National Patriotic Party.    3. (U) Ataka's platform is heavily xenophobic.  Ethnic  parties should be banned, as well as radio and television  broadcasts in Turkish.  Foreign citizens should be  prohibited from buying land, and Bulgarian production, trade  and banks should be in local hands.  Ataka wants to revise  major privatization deals and halt ties with the IMF and the  World Bank.  Bulgaria should renegotiate its accession  treaty with the EU, quit NATO, and not allow foreign  military bases on its territory.  All business deals  involving politicians should be investigated, and illegally  acquired assets should be confiscated.  Siderov said  submission of a draft bill for immediate withdrawal of the  Bulgarian contingent from Iraq is an early priority.    FOUNDERS AND FUNDERS: FORMER SECURITY OFFICERS    4. (SBU) Ataka's parliamentary group includes a significant  number of former military and police officials, most of them  members of Zashtita.  The links of some of Ataka's members  with the former state security services and unreformed  elements of the BSP have fueled conspiracy theories about  Ataka having been created by the BSP and people linked to  the notorious 6th Political Directorate of the communist-era  State Security Service.  Despite the presence of many former  state security officers in Ataka, these theories are not  substantiated.  Ataka relied predominantly on Zashtita's  regional branches for its campaign, and received backing  from local patriotic groups.  Regional private security  companies provided funding for Ataka's relatively  inexpensive campaign.  According to some sources, Overgaz  Chief Sasho Donchev and Nove Holding owner Vassil Bozhkov,  a.k.a., "the Skull," funded Ataka, as well as other parties,  in the final stage of the campaign.    SIDEROV: PROGRESSIVE JOURNALIST TURNED EXTREMIST    5. (U) Born on April 19, 1956, in the town of Yambol, Volen  Siderov studied photography in Sofia, and worked as a  photographer at the National Museum of Literature.  In 1989,  he joined the Union of Democratic Forces (UDF), which led  post-communist changes in Bulgaria.  In 1990, Siderov, who  was perceived as a talented and progressive journalist,  became editor-in-chief of the right-wing daily Democratsia,      the mouthpiece of the UDF.  He was fired in 1992.    6. (U) Siderov has worked for some of Bulgaria's largest-  circulation newspapers, most recently for Monitor daily,  which is strongly anti-U.S.  In 2000, he won an award from  the Union of Bulgarian Journalists.   Siderov, who likes to  shock, posed naked for male magazine "Club M."  In 2002-  2003, Siderov published two books - "The Boomerang of Evil,"  and "Who Robbed Us, and How," in which he expressed strong  anti-Semitic and anti-globalist views.  His latest book,  "Bulgarophobia," argues that Bulgarians are being subjected  to genocide as part of a conspiracy inspired by the West and  "the Zionists."    7. (SBU) In 2003, Siderov's extreme nationalist and anti-  Semitic articles became too radical even for Monitor, which  fired him.  He hosts a TV show called Ataka on the private  cable television channel SKAT, which he uses as a platform  for his extremist views.  Siderov unsuccessfully tried to  get on the ticket of the National Movement for Simeon II  ahead of the 2001 general elections.  In 2003, he ran for  mayor of Sofia on the ticket of a marginal agrarian party.  Siderov, who is divorced, has a long-standing relationship  with journalist Kapka Georgieva, whose son Dimitar Stoyanov  is Ataka's deputy leader.  People who know Siderov describe  him as an oversensitive man, craving to join the political  elite which he so viciously attacks.  Historians involved  with issues of nationalism do not take him seriously and say  he has turned to nationalism as a result of personal and  professional disappointments.  Siderov has not traveled to  the U.S. and has never applied for a U.S. visa.    OTHER KEY FIGURES IN ATAKA    8. (U) Yordan Velichkov, the Chairman of Zashtita, worked  for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs between 1970 and 1992.  He graduated with a degree in law from Sofia University in  1962 and specialized in diplomatic relations at Moscow's  Diplomatic Academy.  Velichkov served in the U.S., Canada  and Yugoslavia, and headed the Consular Relations  Directorate.  Prof. Peter Beron, Zashtita deputy chairman,  is a prominent natural scientist who has served as director  of the National Museum of Natural History since 1993.  Beron  briefly chaired the UDF in 1990, but was forced to quit  following allegations of links with the communist secret  services.  Stela Bankova, a former teacher, entered  Parliament on the NMSS ticket in 2001 but a year later  defected to become independent.  She was the only MP who  voted against Bulgaria's EU accession treaty ratification  last April.  Dimitar Stoyanov, a 22-year-old law student at  Sofia University and deputy leader of Ataka, is the son of  Siderov's girlfriend, Kapka Georgieva, from her first  marriage.  He is openly anti-U.S. and anti-Semitic.  Newspapers carried pictures of him giving the Nazi salute.  Velichkov, Beron, Bankova and Stoyanov are all Ataka MPs.    ATAKA CONSOLIDATES PROTEST, RADICAL VOTE    9. (U) Ataka drew protest votes from across the political  spectrum, receiving backing from people discontented with a  political elite perceived as being detached from real life  issues and from those who have suffered from the post-  communist transition.  It penetrated all age groups, and  drew its support from pensioners, civil servants and  workers.  The plurality of Ataka's supporters backed  Simeon's movement in the 2001 vote, and now see Ataka as the  new "political miracle."  Siderov's aggressive style appeals  to people who blame the mainstream parties for a sharp  decline in their living standard, and look to a strong, new  figure to lead them out of their economic and social  problems.  Ataka also attracted many who did not vote in the  previous elections.    10. (U) Ataka successfully tapped Bulgarians' negative  attitudes towards the Roma following recent violent  incidents between the two groups.  The increased influence  of the ethnic Turkish Movement for Rights and Freedoms (MRF)  party in the government, which has grown disproportionately  to its political representation, has also led some  Bulgarians to back Ataka.  In addition, staunch communists,  who formerly supported the BSP, no longer feel represented  by the reforming Socialists who back membership in the EU  and NATO.  Ataka also consolidated the votes of numerous  marginal patriotic, extremist and radical groups.    11. (U) All parliamentary parties have declared they will  not collaborate with Ataka in the new parliament, and all  coalition scenarios exclude the group's participation in the  government (Ref. A, B).  President Georgi Purvanov blasted  Ataka's extremist statements.  BSP leader Sergey Stanishev  said Ataka's extreme nationalism was "categorically  unacceptable."  The Ambassador has announced a policy of no      embassy contact with Ataka.    12. (SBU) COMMENT:  For mainstream Bulgarians who think of  themselves as tolerant, Ataka came out of nowhere in the  last month of the campaign to win a surprising 21 seats in  the Parliament.  At this point, most see Ataka as a fringe  element which will quickly fade from prominence.  Ataka's  emergence also is unsettling for Bulgaria's anxiety over its  EU membership timetable.  Ataka is a motley group within  which Siderov is perhaps the most extreme -- and certainly  the loudest -- voice.  It is not clear to what extent Ataka  MPs share his radical views, or whether they just used the  popularity of his group to enter parliament.  Some analysts  say Ataka may soon face defections or a split.  Its leaders  are likely to tone down at least their anti-Semitic and  racist rhetoric as they enter parliament.  Nevertheless,  Ataka's presence in parliament is an unfortunate outcome  given Bulgaria's tradition of ethnic tolerance, and will  tarnish the EU aspirant's image abroad. END COMMENT.    13. ATAKA VOTER PROFILE, MBMD exit poll, June 25, 2005.  --------------------------------------------- -----------  GenderMale: 57.7%, Female: 42.3%  --------------------------------------------- -----------  Age 18-29: 18.2%, 30-39: 19.5%, 40-49: 19.2%  .2%  50-59: 21.5%, Over 60: 21.6%  --------------------------------------------- -----------  Education: Univ. 38.8%, High school 54.2%, Elementary 7.1%  --------------------------------------------- -----------  Social group       Employer: 9.3%Mid-level manager:   5.4%       Civil servant 19.9%Worker: 24.7%       Student: 7.8%Unemployed:  6.8%       Housewife: 1.7%Pensioner:  24.4%  --------------------------------------------- -----------  Who they voted for in 2001 general election       National Movement for Simeon II (NMSS) 34.9%       Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP)13.1%       Union of Democratic Forces (UDF)11.3%       Other 20.3%       Did not vote20.3%  --------------------------------------------- -----------  14. Detailed memo available at Department's Bulgaria desk.  PARDEW  lable at Department's Bulgaria desk. 
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