Ecoglasnost Explained

Ecoglasnost Political Club
Native Name:Политически клуб „Екогласност“
Colorcode:
  1. 008200
Leader:Emil Georgiev
Founders:Peter Slabakov
Petar Beron
Aleksandar Karakachanov
Hristo Smolenov
Headquarters:Sofia, zh.k. Mladost, bl. 309
Ideology:Green politics
Environmentalism
Position:Centre-left
National:BSP for Bulgaria
Colours: Green
Seats1 Title:National Assembly
Website:ekoglasnost.bg
Country:Bulgaria

Ecoglasnost (Bulgarian: Екогласност), also known as Independent Society of Ecoglasnost (Bulgarian: Независимо сдружение Екогласност), is an independent Bulgarian environmental organization, established on 11 April 1989 and formally registered on 11 December 1989. Ecoglasnost became a founding member of the umbrella opposition movement Union of Democratic Forces on 7 December 1989, and gave rise to the Green Party of Bulgaria on 28 December 1989, the Political Club of Ecoglasnost in March 1990, and the National Movement of Ecoglasnost on 15 June 1991.[1] [2]

Focusing its activities on several major environmental,human rights and political issues, the organization rapidly gained public support to become the leading opposition to the Communist Party:

In particular, Ecoglasnost organized public petitions, lobbying and demonstrations against the controversial projects of diverting Struma and Mesta Rivers waters to the north, and building the Belene Nuclear Power Plant. Position papers and reports on these issues and on the preservation of Bulgarian nature heritage were disseminated as samizdat, made available to domestic and Western media, and submitted to national authorities as well as to the 35-nation CSCE Meeting on the Protection of the Environment held in Sofia from 16 October to 3 November 1989.[3] [4] [5]

Ecoglasnost played an important role in the political process that lead to the regime change marked by the downfall of the longtime communist ruler Todor Zhivkov on 10 November 1989, paving the way to the restoration of democracy and market economy in Bulgaria:

Notes and References

  1. Lilyana Aleksandrieva and Aleksandar Karakachanov. Independent Society Ecoglasnost, 1989. Sofia: Ciela Soft and Publishing Plc., 2009. 250 pp. (in Bulgarian)
  2. http://www.omda.bg/bulg/news/party/sds.htm#ekoglasnost Omda Registry: Parties and organizations in the Union of Democratic Forces.
  3. Dimitar Ludzhev. The Revolution in Bulgaria, 1989-1991. Book 1. Sofia: Dr. Ivan Bogorov Publishers, 2008. (in Bulgarian)
  4. Lyubomir Ivanov. Charter ’89 for Preservation of the Bulgarian Nature Heritage. Ecoglasnost, 1989.
  5. http://www.wieninternational.at/en/node/14803 Bulgaria 1989: from environmental protests to the Turkish exodus and Central Committee putsch.