Hundreds take part in anti-Gazprom protest in Bulgarian capital

Hundreds take part in anti-Gazprom protest in Bulgarian capital

Hundreds took to the streets of Bulgaria's capital on Wednesday, voicing fears that the country's caretaker government could break with the policies of its pro-Western predecessor and revert to close energy ties with Russia.

The second in a planned series of protests under the slogan #GAZwithme, the demonstration took place in front of the presidential building in Sofia. Organizers say they want greater accountability from the current interim administration, which will hold power until parliamentary elections in early October.

Many in Bulgaria, which is a European Union and NATO member nation, fear that the previous, pro-Western government was toppled in June because of its hard stance against Russia's invasion of Ukraine and its refusal to pay Russian energy giant Gazprom in rubles, Russia's currency.

In late April, Russia cut off gas supplies to Bulgaria, the EU's poorest nation, after it rejected Moscow's demand to pay in rubles.

Relations between the two former Soviet bloc allies had tanked under the previous government.

Talks could resume with Gazprom

The first public statements by the current caretaker government, appointed by Bulgarian President Rumen Radev at the beginning of August, indicate that Bulgaria could restart talks with Gazprom to avoid natural gas shortages later in the year.

"We refuse to be dependent on Gazprom and finance Putin's outrageous war!" read one of the banners at the protest.

Atanas Sharkov, one of the protest organizers, called on Radev, who bears direct responsibility for the actions of the caretaker government, to guarantee that previous decisions will not be revised.

Sharkov also insisted Gazprom no longer be Bulgaria's only gas supplier. "It is high time to follow European policies and be part of Europe," he said.

Last month, the leaders of Greece and Bulgaria marked the completion of a new pipeline that will supply natural gas from Azerbaijan to Bulgaria. They said commercial deliveries are expected to start by Oct. 1.