site.btaParliamentary Committee Rejects Presidential Veto, Radev Says This Shows Reluctance to Fight Corruption
Sofia, January 10 (BTA) - The Legal Affairs Committee in the National  Assembly on Wednesday overturned a presidential veto of provisions in  the new Counter-Corruption and Unlawfully Acquired Asset Forfeiture Act.  Ten committee members voted against the veto and seven others supported  it.
 
 Professor Emilia Droumeva, a legal adviser to President Rumen Radev and a  former constitutional judge, told the committee that the reasons for  the veto were legal, not political. Droumeva said: "We compared foreign  practices and international agreements, and we contrasted the provisions  with the Constitution. Everything was done in good faith, for the sake  of Bulgaria's progress."
 
 However, Deputy Justice Minister Evgeni Stoyanov argued that the  President's reasoning for the veto implies a counter-corruption  philosophy which is different from the concept of the parliamentary  majority.
 
 Reacting to the decision of the Legal Affairs Committee, President Radev  told journalists he was not surprised. Radev said: "All debates on the  counter-corruption law, particularly the events earlier today, show that  there is indeed no political will for a real, comprehensive, and  efficient struggle against corruption. The struggle will obviously  continue to be waged by the citizens and the media."
 
 Asked whether he intends to petition the Constitutional Court, Radev  said this law will not entail real change towards more efficient  suppression of corruption, which is something that the public expects.
 
 Then, Radev took a journalist's question about whether he is worried  about the nine protest demonstrations which will meet EU leaders coming  to Sofia on Thursday, and whether these protests are a matter of  political expediency or are something normal. The President said he is  not the one who should worry. He added: "It is normal. Bulgaria is a  democratic country. Anyone who has demands is free to express them in a  way permitted by the law."
 
 The President also discussed the Istanbul Convention (the Council of  Europe Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and  domestic violence). He called for a thoroughgoing debate on the  Convention before its possible ratification by the National Assembly. He  said: "We already have laws protecting the rights of women and children  and laws against domestic violence, but we are obviously failing to  implement them properly - instead, we are eager to assume international  commitments without figuring out what they are really about and without  holding a really thoroughgoing debate. This is irresponsible."
 
 He went on to say: "The effort to suppress domestic violence and  violence against women must be carried out by the police, by the courts,  here and now. In the meantime, we should be clear about what exactly is  being signed and ratified, rather than realizing post factum what we  have adopted."
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