National frameworks to address hate crime in Bulgaria
This page provides information on the national frameworks to address hate crime in Bulgaria. The information provided here should be viewed alongside data presented on Bulgaria's hate crime report page.
Hate crime recording and data collection
Methodological guidelines issued by the Ministry of Interior govern the process of crime registration, data collection and the compilation of police statistics.
The recording officer can describe any motive for the crime in a specific field of the crime report. The same field is also used to provide preliminary legal qualification by referring to the relevant provisions of the criminal code, including subsections. This is relevant because some offences in the criminal code include aggravation by bias in the subsections of the main provision. If, in the course of pre-trial proceedings, it is revealed that a crime involves a discriminatory motive, the responsible investigating police officer in the Ministry of Interior reports such findings to the supervising prosecutor, who may re-assess the legal qualification, on the basis of which new statistical data are filled in.
Entered data are stored in a set of electronic registries: the Integrated Regional Police System (IRPS); the Automated Information System (AIS) Central Police Register; the AIS Central Police Statistics and the automated systems for filing activities. These systems are organized according to the relevant articles of the criminal code.
The official website of the Ministry of Interior publishes statistical information about registered and solved crimes.
Criminal statistics include the provisions of the Criminal Code under which the case was initiated, or the subsequent development of the case. At the national level, statistical data are collected by prosecutors' offices in the country, and then processed and summarized by the Supreme Cassation Prosecutor's Office.
On 1 January 2025, the procedure and organization of information activities in the Prosecutor's Office was amended by the introduction of a new Instruction on the organization of information activities in the Public Prosecutor's Office. As a result, criminal offences 'with a discriminatory element' are defined into two groups. The first segment includes hate crimes, and comprise specific criminal offences under the Criminal Code that explicitly provide for a discriminatory element in the composition of the crime. The second segment are criminal offences in which discriminatory elements are not included in the composition of the specific crime, but for which data on the case establishes that the crime was committed with a bias motive.
Data on victims/injured parties in crimes committed with a discriminatory element and hate crimes under the newly formed district prosecutors are reported according to the two groups distinguished in the statistical table. Reporting of injured parties is by gender and age. The damaged legal entities are also reported.
Data on cases for this type of crime are contained in the Report on the implementation of the law and on the activities of the Prosecutor's Office and the investigative bodies prepared annually by the Prosecutor General. The reports are published on the Prosecutor's Office's website.
The Informational Systems, Communications and Court Statistics Department (ISCCS) of the Supreme Court of Cassation (SCC) registers criminal cases according to their legal classification with a code. Using that code, the ISCCS extracts annual statistics on the application of the law and the activities of the courts. Where a criminal case involves multiple offences, the code of that offence indicating the highest legal complexity shall be entered. Where the criminal case represents a single offence, but in which more than one of the qualifying elements of the relevant offence has been committed, it is possible to file the case under a code corresponding to a qualifying circumstance other than hatred. As a result, there may be cases that are the subject of a hate crime but which are not reflected in the statistics. However, it is also possible to gather specific data by performing a keyword search in the database.
Hate crime victim support
There is no specialized support system for hate crime victims in Bulgaria. Hate crime victims are entitled to the support provided as part of the general victim support scheme. According to the Bulgarian criminal legislation, victims of hate crimes have the same status in terms of their procedural rights as victims of other crimes. Bulgarian legislation does not provide for explicit privileges for victims depending on the type of crime from which they suffered.
Support for crime victims is provided by both state and private actors, including civil society organizations (CSOs). However, information about victim support providers is not made publicly available. State actors provide medical care, while CSOs offer psychological consultations, free legal aid and practical assistance.
The State co-operates with CSOs on providing support to crime victims. The National Council for Aiding and Compensating Victims of Crime operates under the Ministry of Justice; a CSO – the Bulgarian Association of the Organizations for Support of the Victims of Crimes – is a member of the Council.
There is no procedure for conducting individual needs assessments for hate crime victims. All crime victims receive printed information about the existence of the Aiding and Financial Compensation to Victims of Crimes Act and the possibility to receive compensation.
All victims of crime have a right to the following: to be informed of their rights in criminal proceedings; to receive protection for their safety and that of their relatives; to be informed of the progress of criminal proceedings; to participate in proceedings; to make requests, notes and objections during proceedings; to appeal against acts that lead to the termination or suspension of criminal proceedings; to be represented by a lawyer; and to receive a written translation of the act to terminate or suspend criminal proceedings.
Victims who suffer property or non-pecuniary damage from a crime prosecuted ex officio are entitled to participate in court proceedings as a private prosecutor. The victim of a crime prosecuted by the victim's plea may file and prosecute as a private complainant.
The legal position of the victim in criminal proceedings is regulated in Chapter 8, 'Victim', of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CCP). The injured legal person may participate in proceedings only as a civil claimant if the civil action brought by it is admitted by the first instance court, which, pursuant to Article 248(2) CCP, shall rule at an adjourned hearing on the motions made for the formation of parties to the proceedings. The CCP also grants the victim certain rights in the pre-trial proceedings, which are aimed at facilitating the victim's potential future participation as a party to the proceedings.
Hate crime capacity building
Bulgaria implemented ODIHR's Training Against Hate Crime for Law Enforcement (TAHCLE) programme from 2012 until 2017.