Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Police organize protest demanding higher salaries

| updated on 11/8/20 12:15 PM
Photo: BTA

Police officers and firefighters are to protest in Sofia in the early afternoon of November 8 celebrated as Bulgarian Police Day. They are demanding 30% pay rise in the system of the Ministry of Interior. Their discontent was caused by a decree issued by the Council of Ministers which envisages a 30% pay rise for people employed at 28 administrations in Bulgaria. Meanwhile, the 2021 draft budget envisages that Bulgaria’s Police Officers are to receive 15% pay rise as of next year. 

On Sunday morning Bulgaria’s Premier greeted the Police officers on his Facebook page. “I would like to thank them for providing the most powerful support together with the Bulgarian medics during these difficult months. They have always been at the frontline against the virus, where the risk is highest”, Premier Borissov wrote.

The professional day of the Bulgarian police coincides with the St. Archangel Michael church council and was marked for the first time in 1924.



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Train crash exposes serious problems in Bulgarian railways

There are 1,300 vacancies in the National Railway Infrastructure Company, or about 10% of the jobs - mainly for mechanics, traffic controllers, and switchmen. This was what the chair of the Union of Railway Workers in Bulgaria, Petar..

published on 1/21/25 1:52 PM
Kostadin Angelov

The names of new deputy ministers and regional governors are not known yet

Prof. Kostadin Angelov has been elected as the first rotating chair of the Council for Joint Government Management. The first meeting was attended by Minister of Finance Temenuzhka Petkova and Deputy Prime Minister Tomislav Donchev as..

published on 1/21/25 1:27 PM

Rumen Radev: 2025 will mark a turning point not only for Bulgaria, the region and Europe, but also for the world

In 2024, democracies took advantage of political and technological changes by removing unsuccessful leaders, abandoning outdated ideas and embracing new  and well-founded priorities, President Rumen Radev said during the 5 th edition of the Sofia..

published on 1/21/25 10:42 AM