SOFIA (Reuters) --- Bulgaria's
parliament ratified on Friday an agreement with NATO ally Poland for the repair
of its ageing Soviet-era MiG-29 fighter jets, part of a push by the Balkan
country to reduce its reliance on Russia.
Under the deal,
which Russia has sought to challenge, Poland will lend Bulgaria two jet engines
for two years and repair the engines of six MiG-29 jets for an estimated 6.14
million euros ($6.52 million).
The agreement marks
another step by Bulgaria to
gradually switch to non-Russian supplies, a trend that has accelerated since
the European Union - to which Bulgaria
belongs - and the United States
imposed sanctions on Moscow over its role in the
Ukraine
crisis.
The deal won
support from 130 lawmakers with 41 voting against it.
The Russian
Aircraft Corporation (RSK) MiG, however, said that the fighter jets could not
be repaired in Poland since Warsaw did not have the
right to provide spare parts of the aircraft to third countries.
Nenchev rejected
that, saying Poland
had provided guarantees for the much needed repairs. "Poland is the
only country that has the economic and the technological capacity to maintain
and repair our MiG-29s," he told parliament.
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