Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




MILPLEX
Bulgaria's ex-arms industry hub looks back on glory days
by Staff Writers
Sopot, Bulgaria (AFP) May 10, 2013


At the foot of the Balkan mountains, the Bulgarian town of Sopot remembers with nostalgia its glory days as a booming arms industry centre under communism.

Today, poverty and worries about the future reign, and people are anxious about Sunday's general elections.

The next government will have to decide the fate of VMZ, the severely indebted arms production plant that was once the shining example of the country's defence industry, after a recent failed privatisation attempt.

That decision could have far-reaching consequences for a region which still heavily relies on the plant.

Talk to VMZ workers and they'll say: "We are badly paid but we want to keep our jobs. There's hardly any other work in the region."

Fearing for their jobs, the workers are reluctant to give their names. Many even refused outright to speak to journalists.

"We deprive ourselves of everything and haven't paid our electricity bills," said one worker, a 35-year-old mother of two.

Her husband was unemployed so the family survived on her monthly pay of 350 leva (180 euros, $235), she said.

This compared with the average cost of living for a four-person Bulgarian family of 2,264 leva, according to a recent KNSB trade union estimate.

Twenty-three years after the fall of communism, Sopot -- once a populous town that blossomed around the defence giant -- has seen its population drop by a third to 12,000 people, says Mayor Veselin Lichev, himself a former employee at VMZ.

In the plant's heyday, some 20,000 people from the town and the surrounding area worked there, making missiles and artillery ammunition for the whole Eastern bloc.

The end of communism in 1989 however ruined the Bulgarian arms industry, which lost its markets in the ex-Soviet states and third world countries.

The sector now employs about 15,000 people compared with 115,000 under communism, government data shows.

-- Under communism, 'there was work for everyone' --

The last of Bulgaria's defence plants which is still state-owned, VMZ now employs less than 3,000 people and workers have mixed feelings about privatisation, fearing it will spell new lay-offs.

"Privatisation will make the company more flexible and able to find clients," Maria Lalova, a local KNSB trade union official, told AFP.

"But if we talk about job security, it is better if the plant stays state-owned."

Last December, VMZ workers and their families joined weeks of strikes to demand salaries that had gone unpaid for three months.

One worker, Daniela Genkova, sent a loaf of bread and an onion to then-prime minister Boyko Borisov to illustrate her family's daily meal -- an act that received much publicity at the time.

Genkova now refuses to give interviews. The plant's management also declined to speak with AFP.

Workers say they miss the job security and other perks under communism.

"There was work for everyone and the plant subsidised our holidays at the Black Sea," retired VMZ employee Tsanko Ivanov, 72, reminisced.

"Since then, there has been a succession of parties in power but their leaders only seek to enrich themselves without caring for the people," he told AFP.

Most of the younger generation has now left Sopot, seeking jobs in the big cities and abroad.

Other than emigration, their only option is to work at an infantry battalion base in nearby Karlovo that trains Bulgarian soldiers for missions abroad, said trade union official Lalova.

The Sopot mayor's office has been trying to develop tourism and adventure sports to give the few remaining young people in the region an alternative means of employment.

But as Lalova put it: "The problem with the young is very serious."

And the lives of other residents who remained were also less than secure, she added.

One retired woman in her 60s who declined to be named has resorted to growing her own food in her small garden in a village near Sopot.

"After 40 years working at VMZ, my pension is just 230 leva," she said. "But at least I get it regularly."

.


Related Links
The Military Industrial Complex at SpaceWar.com
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








MILPLEX
France told to cut back on military pomp and ceremony
Paris (AFP) May 07, 2013
In another sign of tough times in France, the government has been told to cut the size of the Republican Guard, the elite unit that provides the pomp and ceremony on state occasions. The Guard, which includes the last cavalry unit of the French army, has 2,859 civilian and military staff and costs 280 million euros ($367m) a year to run. Officially, 69 percent of this budget is dedicated ... read more


MILPLEX
Researchers work to capture electrical energy from plants

Setting the standard for sustainable bioenergy crops

Recipe for Low-Cost, Biomass-Derived Catalyst for Hydrogen Production

China conducts its first successful bio-fueled airline flight

MILPLEX
MakerBot and Robohand

Robot uses arms, location and more to discover objects

Seahorse's Armor Gives Engineers Insight Into Robotics Designs

Robotic insects make first controlled flight

MILPLEX
Scotland approves 640-foot prototype offshore wind turbine

Wind Power: TUV Rheinland Certifies HybridDrive from Winergy

Wales wind power line to go underground near historic village

UK Ministry of Defense Deems Wind Towers a National Security Threat

MILPLEX
Japan automakers step on profit accelerator

China April auto sales up despite weak economy

Electric car maker Tesla posts first profit

German high-speed autobahns rev election year debate

MILPLEX
Turkish energy hub plan faces hurdles

New Mechanism Converts Natural Gas to Energy Faster, Captures CO2

South Australia rocked by new clean energy technology

Chevron gets permit to look for shale gas in Romania

MILPLEX
Czech CEZ power group reports jump in Q1 profit

India gives go-ahead to disputed nuclear plant

Supreme Court allows protest-hit Indian nuclear plant

Foreign Ownership Could Halt Licensing of South Texas Project Nuclear Reactors

MILPLEX
New Wyoming Lithium Deposit could Meet all US Demand

British lawmakers: Lack of clear policy hindering energy investment

EU lawmakers to vote on reform of 'polluter pays'

Researchers estimate a cost for universal access to energy

MILPLEX
US urban trees store carbon, provide billions in economic value

Forest-mapping satellite to join Earth study mission: ESA

As climate changes, boreal forests to shift north and relinquish more carbon than expected

Nicaraguan rainforest said under threat from growing illegal logging




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement