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Monument to the Ukrainian soldiers who died for the freedom of Bulgaria (2006), Sea Garden in Varna, Bulgaria. Modern relations between Bulgaria and Ukraine as independent nations began only in the final stages of World War I, when the Kingdom of Bulgaria established official diplomatic relations with the newly independent Ukrainian People's Republic, following the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on ...
Ukrainian-Bulgarian relations are characterized by a constant active political dialogue at the highest level. Ukraine and Bulgaria actively cooperate and provide mutual support within the framework of regional and international organizations, such as the BSEC, the Central European Initiative, the OSCE, the Council of Europe, the United Nations.
Pages in category "Bulgaria–Ukraine relations" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Amazon has invested $75 million so far in its Ukraine effort, which includes the data transfer via the "Snowballs," as they're called. Fedorov, speaking at a tech conference in Las Vegas earlier ...
See Malta–Ukraine relations. The Maltese embassy in Moscow (Russia) is also accredited as a non-resident embassy to Ukraine. Ukraine is represented in Malta through its embassy in Rome (Italy). Moldova: 27 December 1991 [212] See Moldova–Ukraine relations. Ukraine opened an embassy in Chișinău and a consulate in Bălți in 2005.
Farmers across Bulgaria protested Monday after the government lifted a ban on food products from Ukraine, complaining that the move will cause an influx that drives down prices for local growers.
A majority of 147 lawmakers in the 240-seat chamber voted in favor of supplying Ukraine with portable anti-aircraft missile systems and surface-to-air missiles of various types intended to bolster ...
During the full-scale Russian invasion in Ukraine that began on February 24, 2022, a large part of the territories with a compact Bulgarian population were occupied by the Russian army, and in the occupied parts of the Zaporizhzhia Oblast, the occupation authorities forbade the study of the Bulgarian language and closed Bulgarian Sunday schools ...