[09SOFIA154] SOFIA’S MEAN STREETS

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Published by Wikileaks & Bivol.bg
 date: 4/2/2009 14:03 refid: 09SOFIA154 origin: Embassy Sofia classification: CONFIDENTIAL destination:  header: R 021403Z APR 09 FM AMEMBASSY SOFIA TO SECSTATE WASHDC 5890 INFO EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE    C O N F I D E N T I A L SOFIA 000154      SIPDIS    EUR/CE - TOM YEAGER    E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/02/2019  TAGS: PGOV, PREL, BU  SUBJECT: SOFIA'S MEAN STREETS    Classified By: Charge Alex Karagiannis for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).    1.  (C)  Summary:  Sofia's streets are a showcase for  potholes and uncollected garbage.  Lined by decaying soviet  style blocks and uncompleted new construction (mixed with  some glitzy modern buildings), they are ugly.  While the  ordinary crime rate is low, organized crime violence is a  recurrent feature as rivals compete for turf and engage in  contract killings.  This landscape is the visible result of  years of pervasive political corruption and the persistent  failure in Bulgaria,s law enforcement and public  administration systems.  While the Socialist(BSP) led  government tries to convince the public and the EU that it is  seriously fighting crime and corruption, every day the  average person sees massive flouting of the law.  Gangsters,  thugs, and mutri (shady businessmen) in expensive cars show  off their ill-gotten wealth.  They easily slip through the  cumbersome and corrupt justice system (no major OC figure has  ever spent significant time in jail).  Some young people see  mutri as role models: cool, feared, and above the law.  A  coarsening of society is taking place.  Tired and cynical  about government institutions and politicians, Bulgarians  have come to accept corruption as part of the normal  landscape and find it easier to cope with it rather than to  change it.  This mood will likely dominate as Bulgarians go  to the polls this summer.  End Summary.    ----------------  UGLY AND BOORISH  ----------------    2.  (SBU)  Arriving in Sofia by air, a traveler is unsure if  Bulgaria is yet a modern EU country.  Airport Terminal 2 is  clean, modern, and efficient; Terminal 1 is old, dingy, and  cigarette-smoke infused.  Once a traveler hits the airport  access road and the main thoroughfares, the picture gets  starker.  Drab, decrepit soviet style blocks rise up, in  stark juxtaposition to the Porsche dealership.  Crumbling  streets with unevenly patched pavement, potholes that can  pass for tank traps, and sidewalks crammed with parked cars  are routine.  Basic infrastructure is mediocre to poor.  A  years-long garbage mess (no room in landfills) has gotten  worse over a contract dispute with the collection companies;  refuse is both scattered and piled high.  Packs of wild dogs  roam widely, even in central residential areas and what  passes as the leafy, upscale suburban neighborhoods.  What  had been a rather green, complacent, modestly architecturally  interesting city with a pleasant historic center has become a  car-choked, trashy mess.    3.  (C)  Bad as that is, the organized crime situation is  ugly as well.  Ordinary crime is pretty low, and most  citizens feel safe.  But crimes directed at and by the bling,  shady nouveau riche -- intimidation, extortion, kidnappings  -- have become more visible, and those criminals are more  arrogant.  The raw statistics indicate failure or  unwillingness to deal with serious crimes:  since 1997, there  have been over 130 contract murders, with only a handful of  arrests and just five convictions.  What previously had been  professional killings (both shootings and bombings) with no  collateral damage, have now gotten sloppier; in one instance  a drive-by machine gun spray failed to do the job outside a  popular restaurant, but did terrorize other patrons.  One  prominent, perhaps shady, lawyer was gunned down just days  ago in a provincial capital.    4.  (SBU) Over the past six months, there have been bombings  at so-called gentlemen,s clubs -- as organized crime  families play out their turf wars.  The number of kidnappings  of wealthy (and perhaps sleazy) businessmen has gone up;  it,s a lucrative new racket.  Recently, in one very crude,  but effective extortion case, one hotel owner received a  hand-grenade with the pin removed.  Organized criminals and  their no-neck, black-leather-clad body guards flaunt and  disobey the law; big, black SUVs are the rage, barreling down  streets, ignoring traffic and parking regulations.  Seeing no  force to control them, many ordinary Bulgarians have followed  suit, running lights, passing against oncoming city traffic,  and the like.  Young people find mutri -- cool guys above the  law with money and status -- an attractive role model.  In a  hilarious interview that unwittingly confirms the view that  muscle and money are what matter, the new "Miss Bulgaria"  spoke openly that she is not some "cheap prostitute" and how  her Russian "businessman" boyfriend helps get nice things --  in what is widely considered to have been a rigged selection.   The overall attitude amounts to private gain and social  indifference.    -----------------------------------  PUBLIC SERVICES -- CRIMINAL NEGLECT  -----------------------------------    5.  (C)  Sofia's dilapidated condition does not come from a  poor economy.  National growth has averaged about seven  percent for five years.  The central government has  maintained large fiscal reserves and not spent wisely on  basic infrastructure.  Meanwhile, corruption siphoned off the  nation's wealth to shady businesses, government officials and  political parties, imposing a heavy toll on public services.  Potholed and poorly lit roads are the norm.  Sofia's garbage  collection crisis, recalling scenes of Naples, now in its  sixth week, is symbolic of an indifferent, sometimes testy  relationship between the municipal and central governments as  they play a blame game in advance of summer elections.  The  most vital public services, law and order forces, have gone  from bad to worse.  Almost a year after the forced  resignation of disgraced Interior Minister Petkov, there are  few tangible changes at that sprawling, dysfunctional agency.    Things are little better at the newly created State Agency  for National Security (DANS).  Intended to target high level  organized crime and corruption, DANS is instead politicized;  some officials have links to criminals and shady businesses.    6.  (C)  Meanwhile, old scandals fester and new ones emerge.  The line-up is extensive; a short list of the most prominent  case includes Sofia,s heating utility; Sofia,s garbage  service; the state Road Infrastructure Fund; misuse of  multiple EU SAPARD and PHARE funds; multiple agricultural and  environmental programs; numerous dubious land swaps; the  National Revenue Agency; and the Customs Agency, notorious  for its many senior officials known by their criminal  nicknames such as "The Penguin" and "Silicon Girl."  Looking  at summer parliamentary elections, Bulgarians understand that  mainline parties profit from corruption and have no real  interest in reform.  A new party, Leader, the personal  project of a shady businessman (unknown five years ago and  today the second wealthiest Bulgarian), has a genuine chance  to enter parliament.  Though formed on the premise that it is  more cost effective to own your own party than to pay off  other politicians, Leader,s clever slogans of protest,  populism and nationalism appeal to alienated voters.    7.  (C)  COMMENT:  Sofia is not Bulgaria, so the picture here  may be more intense than elsewhere.  Nor is cynicism about  politicians and government anything new.  Bulgarians tend to  look outside themselves for hope; many value the abstraction  of the EU far above any of their own politicians or  institutions.  Neither Sofia,s streets nor the mutri culture  will likely be cleaned up quickly under such conditions.  But, high frustration and resignation levels are now mixed  with some real anger.  If a new government makes a clean-up a  priority, it could tap into and motivate citizen support.  END COMMENT.      Karagiannis 
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