Picture from the Lukov march in the centre of Sofia in 2019.
The march was scheduled to darken the streets of Sofia once again on February 13, but the police did not allow those who convened for the march to disrupt the public order thanks to Sofia Mayor Yordanka Fandakova, Bulgaria Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, the Supreme Administrative Prosecutor’s Office, the Ministry of Interior, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and National Anti-Semitism Coordinator Georg Georgiev.
A planned neo-Nazi march in the streets of Sofia, capital of Bulgaria, was finally not allowed to take place.
The march was meant to honor WWII-era general and Nazi collaborator Hristo Lukov.
Picture from the Lukov march in the centre of Sofia in 2019.
The march was scheduled to darken the streets of Sofia once again on February 13, but the police did not allow those who convened for the march to disrupt the public order thanks to Sofia Mayor Yordanka Fandakova, Bulgaria Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, the Supreme Administrative Prosecutor’s Office, the Ministry of Interior, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and National Anti-Semitism Coordinator Georg Georgiev.
A planned neo-Nazi march in the streets of Sofia, capital of Bulgaria, was finally not allowed to take place.
The march was meant to honor WWII-era general and Nazi collaborator Hristo Lukov.