Циганите в България Roma andi Bulgariya | |
---|---|
Total population | |
325,343 (2011 Census; 4.4%)[1] European Commission's average estimate: 750,000[2][3] (last updated 14 September 2010)[4] unofficial estimates: 800,000[5] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Nationwide, rural and urban. Centered in cities with the largest concentrations in Sliven, Sofia, and Pazardzhik.[6] | |
Languages | |
| |
Religion | |
|
Romani people in Bulgaria (Bulgarian: Циганите в България, romanized: Ciganite v Bǎlgariya; Romani: Romane ando Bulgariya) constitute Europe's densest Roma minority. The Romani people in Bulgaria may speak Bulgarian, Turkish or Romani, depending on the region.[8]
According to the latest census in 2011, the number of the Romani is 325,343, constituting 4.4% of the total population, in which only one ethnic group could be opted as an answer and 10% of the total population did not respond to the question on ethnic group.[1] In a conclusive report of the census sent to Eurostat, the authors of the census (the National Statistical Institute of Bulgaria) identified the census results on ethnicity as a "gross manipulation".[9] The former head of the National Statistical Institute of Bulgaria, Reneta Indzhova claims to have been fired by the Bulgarian Prime Minister in 2014 for attempting to check the actual number of the Romani and implied that neither the census did enumerate the Romani, nor its statistics did provide the "real data".[10]
The previous 2001 census recorded 370,908 Romani (4.7% of the population). The preceding 1992 census recorded 313,396 Romani (3.7% of the population), while a secret backstage 1992 census ordered by the Ministry of Interior recorded a figure of 550,000 Romani (6.5% of the population); the Ministry of Interior ordered at least two other secret censuses to enumerate the Romani in denial, the one in 1980 recorded 523,519 Romani, while the one in 1989 recorded that the number of the Romani was 576,927 (6.5% of the population) and that over half of the Romani identified as Turks.[11] The majority of the estimated 200,000-400,000 Muslim Romani tend to identify themselves as ethnic Turks,[12] some deny their origin, or identify as Bulgarians.
The demographic collapse in Bulgaria that has affected most ethnic groups in the country has not had the same effect on the Romani.[13] According to data of the European Commission, to which Eurostat belongs, the Romani in Bulgaria number 750,000 and they constitute 10.33% of the population.[2][3] An NGO disputes this claim and estimates that the number of the Romani in Bulgaria is twice as high, stating their population grows by 35,000 a year.[14][15]