Volen Siderov

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Volen Siderov (Bulgarian: Волен Сидеров) (born 19 April 1956) is a controversial Bulgarian politician and chairman of the far right nationalist party Attack. He is famous for his hard-line attitude towards minorities in Bulgaria, especially Gypsies and Turks.

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[edit] Early life

Siderov was born in 1956 in Yambol, Bulgaria. He received an undergraduate degree in Applied Photography in Sofia, and before the fall of Communism in 1989, worked at the National Literature Museum as a photographer.

After the fall of Communism, Siderov became a member of the newly-established Movement for Human Rights. During the fall of 1990, he became the editor-in-chief of Democracy (Bulgarian: Демокрация), the official newspaper of the Democratic Party at that time (Siderov played a major role in establishing the paper as the official publication of the centre-right party).

In 1992, he was surprisingly fired from the newspaper and put an end to all relationships with his political partners. At one point he was appointed deputy editor-in-chief of Monitor, a newspaper of a political orientation that could be described as nationalist and conservative. In 2000, Siderov was presented with the award of the Union of the Bulgarian Journalists. Later, he was fired from Monitor as well, and he came to be the host of Attack, a talk show on the Bulgarian cable TV channel "SKAT". In it, he chastised the perceived corruption of the Bulgarian political establishment and blamed Bulgaria's poor economic condition on the ethnic minorities. In 2002 Siderov was invited to a controversial anti-globalization conference in Moscow where he rubbed shoulders with people like Ahmed Rami and David Duke ([1]).

[edit] Rise in politics

During the 2003 local elections Siderov ran for mayor of Sofia on the ticket of the marginal National Association-BZNS Party. He received 1,728 votes, or 0.45% ([2]). That attempt passed largely unnoticed for the general public.

During the June 2005 parliamentary elections, already a popular TV host, Siderov organised and led the nationalist coalition "Attack", named after his talk show. Surprisingly, the coalition won 8.14% (296,848 votes) of the total vote, thus becoming the 4th largest party in parliament. (Source: Central Elections Committee.) Soon afterwards, Siderov founded a political party of the same name.

[edit] Controversy

Since then, Siderov has continued to criticise what he describes as domination and exploitation of Bulgaria by its ethnic minorities. He has also made some homophobic statements. Siderov has been stigmatized and rejected as a populist and a xenophobe by virtually the entire Bulgarian establishment, including all the mainstream observers and political parties. He has been in the centre of a number of scandals, notably a notorious car accident on the Trakia highway. Siderov claimed that the incident had been an "assassination attempt", whereas the other driver asserted that Siderov's collaborator Pavel Chernev had broken his car window, punctured his tyres, hit him and threatened to kill him. Chernev at first confirmed Siderov's version, but later stated that Siderov had ordered him to give false testimony; he has left the parliamentary group, as have half of the group's members since the elections. Siderov had allegedly been trying to conceal the fact that his driver had been Lyubomir Bakardzhiev, a man with criminal record - according to testimony by Chernev and Bakardzhiev himself. ([3])

[edit] Presidential election

Siderov ran for President in the 2006 presidential election. In the first round on October 22 he received 21% of the vote and qualified for the runoff on October 29 against incumbent Georgi Parvanov, who had 65%. Parvanov was not declared the winner after the first round because, in accordance with Bulgarian electoral law, at least 50% of all registered voters had to take part in the first round for that. Mainstream right-wing parties in Bulgaria (the UDF and the DSB) refused to back any of the candidates, despite appeals by many observers, notably by fellow conservative and European People's Party chairman Hans-Gert Pöttering, to support Parvanov (the situation was commonly compared with the way French left voters supported mainstream right-wing candidate Jacques Chirac against far-right Jean-Marie Le Pen in 2002). The centrist National Movement for Simeon II ultimately decided to back Parvanov. In the second round, Siderov lost with about 25% of the vote.

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