Bulgarian Drivers Extend 'Counter-Blockade' on Greece Border

File photo, BGNES

Bulgarian drivers have sealed off yet another border crossing point on the frontier with Greece, vowing to include more border crossings in what is already called a "counter-blockade".

Kapitan Petko Voyvoda-Ormenion border crossing, on the eastern part of the common border, was closed to all traffic at 08.15 local time, Focus News Agency quotes border police officials as saying.

On its own website, however, the border police directorate warns it cannot provide up-to-date information about traffic at border crossings with Greece "due to the extremely dynamic situation."

The reason is that Greek farmers, who have been protesting for weeks over Athens' plans to introduce new social insurance and tax legislation, are failing to hold on to their promises and lift the blockade for several hours a day in the afternoon to allow commercial transit trucks into or out of Greece.

Kilometers-long queues are formed on both sides of the borders at Kulata-Promachonas and Ilinden-Exochi crossings, the two points where most of the farmers' protest action has been taking place.

At Ilinden-Exochi, no vehicles will be granted passage until 15:00, and cars and buses will be able to move both ways in the two hours to follow.

On Tuesday, as the protests of Greek farmers were well into their fourth week, truck drivers stranded on the Bulgarian side of the border announced they were setting up a "counter-blockade" which began from Kulata (the Bulgarian checkpoint at the Kulata-Promachonas border crossing).

Venting their anger at farmers' refusal to grant passage to transit trucks in compliance with the schedule agreed last week (this should happen between 11:00 and 16:00 local time, EET), drivers said they were planning to...

Continue reading on: