- Incident at Petrich
The incident at Petrich, named after the Bulgarian border town
Petrich was the short occupation of the town by Greece in 1925.The incident
It allegedly started on
22 October , when a Greeksoldier ran after hisdog , which had strayed across the border from Macedonia; thus, it is sometimes speculatively referred to as the War of the Stray Dog. The border was guarded byBulgaria n sentries, and one of them shot the Greek soldier.According to the greek army a Greek captain was also shot.Given the tense political climate, escalation was inevitable; in response, the Greek dictatorial government under General Theodoros Pangalos sent soldiers intoBulgaria and occupied Petrich.He also sent message to the Bulgarian side demanding:
# The punishment of the Bulgarian commanders of the troops that shot the greek soldiers.
# Official apology from the Bulgarian government for the incident.
# Six million drahmas as compensation for the families of the victims.Bulgaria was given 48 hours to accept the greek demands.International intervention
Bulgaria ordered its troops to provide only token resistance, trusting the
League of Nations to settle the dispute.On the other sideGreece made clear that is not interested in bulgarian territory but demands the compensation. The League did indeed condemn the Greek invasion, and called for both Greek withdrawal and compensation to Bulgaria. Greece ceded to this demand and was imposed a fine of £45,000. Over 50 people were killed before Greece complied. Greece complained about the disparity between itstreatment and that ofItaly in theCorfu incident in 1923, when the Italian armed forces occupied the Greek island ofCorfu in retaliation for themurder of Italian generalEnrico Tellini while surveying the Greek border withAlbania .ee also
* Theodoros Pangalos, Greek Prime Minister during incident
*Aleksandar Tsankov , Bulgarian Prime Minister during incident
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