Currently, there are 131 institutes in Bulgaria, accommodating 6,336 children.
Thousands of children in Bulgaria are living either in state-run homes, or in facilities operated by private charities. And the country's strict adoption laws means the children may remain in the institutions for many years before they find new families. To add to their unfortunate experiences, the conditions they are forced to live in are often far from ideal.
Faced with the urgent problem of some 8,000 abandoned children, Bulgaria is desperately trying to modernise its network of dilapidated orphanages amid revelations of paedophilia and cruelty....
Katie 'Jordan' Price is a woman who knows what she wants. And she wants to adopt a Bulgarian baby. Not a Croatian child, not an Albanian toddler, but a bona fide Bulgarian baby...
Less than one-third of the 8,600 children in Bulgaria’s orphanages are awaiting adoption, according to the State Agency for the Protection of Children. Officials from the agency told a conference...
One-time only financial support for the birth of a second child will triple in 2008, from 200 to 600 leva. Labour Minister Emiliya Maslarova announced that the one-time only financial help...
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