Russian Security Services Say Terror Attack Foiled

Russia’s counterterrorism agency says its forces have foiled a terror attack on Moscow.

In a statement issued on May 20, the National Antiterror Committee said two of the suspected plotters were killed after a gunbattle on the outskirts of Moscow, and a third suspect was arrested.

One special forces official was slightly injured.

The committee said all three suspects were ethnic Russians.

It said all three men were suspected of having received training in the border region between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

No further information on the apparent foiled plot was immediately available.

A Kremlin spokesman said President Vladimir Putin has been informed about the situation.

The last major terrorist attack in Moscow was a suicide bombing at Domodedovo International Airport in January 2011 that left 37 people dead.

Based on reporting ITAR-TASS, Interfax, and AFP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Supreme Court To Hear Khodorkovsky Appeal

Russia’s Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal against the second conviction of jailed former oil tycoon and Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovsky.

The court posted its decision to review the conviction of Khodorkovsky and his former business partner Platon Lebedev on its website on May 19.

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It did not say when the hearing would take place.

“This means that the appeal will be reviewed at a special session of the judicial board,” Khodorkovsky’s lawyer, Vadim Klyuvgant, said.

Khodorkovksy, the former head of the now dismantled Yukos oil company, and Lebedev were imprisoned in 2004 on fraud and tax-evasion charges.

Shortly before their scheduled release, their stay in jail was extended during a second and controversial trial in 2010.

Lebedev is now due to be released in August 2014 and Khodorkovsky in October 2014.

Based on reporting by AFP and ITAR-TASS

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Ultrationalists Allegedly Involved In High-Profile Killings Detained

Two members of a Russian ultranationalist group allegedly involved in high-profile killings have been arrested in Serbia and Ukraine.

Russia’s Investigative Committee spokesman said on May 13 that Ilya Gorycahev was arrested in Serbia, while Mikhail Volkov was detained in Ukraine.

The two activists, who belong to the “Militant Organization of Russian Nationalists” (BORN) were allegedly involved in the murders of a Moscow City Court judge, Eduard Chuvashov, in April 2010 and lawyer Stanislav Markelov in January 2009.

The two men have also been implicated in the killings of three antifascist activists and four Russian citizens from the Caucasus.

The pair have been accused of at least two attempted murders, the organization of an extremist group, and the illegal possession and distribution of weapons.

Russian authorities are working on the extradition of both men. 

Based on reporting by Interfax and  ITAR-TASS

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Officials Say Volgograd Killing Was Homophobic Attack

Russian law enforcement officials have confirmed that a man was tortured and murdered in the southern city of Volgograd, apparently because he was gay.

A spokeswoman for the Volgograd office of the Investigative Committee said on May 12 that the battered body of the unidentified victim was found on the morning of May 10.

Two men, aged 22 and 27, have been arrested in connection with the attack.

According to investigators, the 23-year-old victim had been drinking with the two men to celebrate Victory Day on May 9 when he told them he was gay.

The two men then allegedly beat him, sodomized him with a beer bottle, and smashed in his skull with a stone.

Activists in Russia say it is rare for officials to specify homophobia as the motive for a crime. 

Based on reporting by Reuters, AFP, and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Patriarch Conducts Service In Beijing

Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill has performed a service in Beijing during his first-ever visit to neighboring China.

The service was performed on May 12 amid tight security in a tent on the grounds of the Russian Embassy with some 300 people in attendance.

On May 10, Kirill met with Chinese President Xi Jinping, and the next day he toured the Great Wall of China and the Forbidden City in Beijing.

During the remaining three days of his visit, Kirill plans to meet with Orthodox believers in Harbin and Shanghai.

Based on reporting by AFP and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Navy Begins Staffing Mediterranean Group Of Warships

The Russian Navy has begun the process of creating a permanent staff to control its operations in the Mediterranean Sea.

Admiral Viktor Chirkov made the statement on May 12 while celebrating the 230th anniversary of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet in the Ukrainian city of Sevastopol, the fleet’s home port.

He said the Mediterranean staff will comprise some 20 officers, mostly taken from the command of the Black Sea Fleet.

The Mediterranean group will include ships from the Northern Fleet, the Baltic Fleet, the Black Sea Fleet, and, possibly, the Pacific Fleet.

The Mediterranean deployment will comprise five to six warships and their service vessels.

Chirkov said it is possible that the group will include nuclear submarines.

The Soviet Union and later Russia maintained a Mediterranean squadron from 1967 until 1992.

Based on reporting by RIA-Novosti and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Official Says Syria Conference Not Possible In May

A Russian official says there are disagreements over who has the right to take part in Syria’s peace process, suggesting this could hamper efforts to organize an international conference.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had announced on May 7 that Washington and Moscow would seek to organize a conference on Syria and expressed hope it could be held this month.

Western and Russian news agencies quote the unnamed official, who was present at the Kerry-Lavrov talks, as saying an international meeting “by the end of May is impossible.”

Russia has opposed sanctions against Syria but has backed calls for the creation of a transitional government.

The United Nations estimates that the two-year conflict in Syria has claimed the lives of at least 70,000 people.

Based on reporting by Reuters and ITAR-TASS

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Kerry Says Russian Missiles For Assad Would Be ‘Destabilizing’

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has warned the sale of sophisticated surface-to-air Russian missiles to Syria would be “potentially destabilizing” for the region.

Kerry, who was speaking in Rome after talks with Italian Foreign Minister Emma Bonino, was reacting to a report on May 8 in “The Wall Street Journal” that said Israel had warned Washington that Russia planned to sell S-300 missile batteries to Syria.

But Kerry refused to point fingers at Russia, saying it was “counterproductive” at a time the two countries were trying to promote a peace conference.

“I had my say with [Russian] President [Vladimir] Putin and I had my say with [Russian Foreign Minister] Sergei Lavrov and we made an agreement to go to a negotiation in the next days, and I am not going to get into — here, now, at this moment — as I said, distinguishing features between one country’s aid and another country’s aid [for Syria] and who is doing what,” Kerry said. “That would be counterproductive to what we are trying to accomplish. I think we have made it crystal clear [that] we would prefer that Russia was not supplying assistance [to the Syrian government] — that is on record, that hasn’t changed — but I am not going to get into the qualitative differences at this moment.”

S-300 batteries can take out aircraft or guided missiles and would enhance the Syrian government’s defensive ability, making it harder for the United States and other governments to consider the possibility of trying to enforce a no-fly zone in the country.

Even before Syria’s 2011 uprising, the Israelis warned about a sale of S-300 batteries. Moscow had held off on the deal under persistent U.S. and Israeli pressure.

The S-300 would be a state-of-the-art upgrade for Syria’s aging Soviet-supplied defense system, which was easily circumvented in 2007 when Israeli jets bombed a suspected nuclear reactor site along the Euphrates River in northeastern Syria.

Syria has been a close military ally of Moscow for decades, and Russia has blocked international efforts to isolate President Bashar al-Assad’s regime over its brutal crackdown on a two-year-old revolt.

The Syrian Foreign Ministry meanwhile welcomed the proposal from Russia and the United States to arrange a conference on ending the conflict.

Based on reporting by AP, AFP, and Reuters

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Ban Welcomes New U.S., Russian Initiative On Syria

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has welcomed news Russia and the United States will seek new peace talks with both sides in the Syrian conflict.

The announcement was made late on May 7 in Moscow by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Kerry said Washington and Moscow will work to organize an international conference on Syria maybe as soon as later this month.

Opposition leaders, however, are skeptical of any initiative they fear may let President Bashar al-Assad hang on to power.

Opposition members said they were concerned by comments from Kerry in Moscow, echoing Russia, that the decision on who takes part in a transitional government should be left to Syrians.

Syria’s opposition rejects any role for Assad or his inner circle.

Based on AP and Reuters reporting

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian President Accepts Resignation Of Deputy PM Surkov

Russian President Vladimir Putin has accepted the resignation of influential Deputy Prime Minister Vladislav Surkov.

The Kremlin statement on May 8 said Surkov, who was once Putin’s top political strategist, had left his post voluntarily.

The resignation came one day after Putin reprimanded the government for failing to carry out all his presidential decrees.

Presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed the resignation was connected with that failure.

ALSO READ: The ‘Cold War’ In The Kremlin

Meanwhile, federal investigators are probing accusations of embezzlement at the Skolkovo Innovation Center, where Surkov sits on a supervisory board.

In his role as deputy prime minister, Surkov was responsible for the country’s economic modernization.

From 1999 until 2011, he was deputy chief of the Russian presidential administration and was considered an architect of Russia’s tightly controlled political system, which he described as “sovereign democracy.”

Based on reporting by AFP, Reuters, and ITAR-TASS

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Kerry urges Russian cooperation on Syria

John Kerry, US secretary of state, has called Russian President Vladimir Putin to help find “common ground” over the conflict in Syria, saying the US and Russia had shared interests in the country.

At the start of talks in the Kremlin on Tuesday, Kerry told Putin that efforts to end the two-year-old conflict that has killed more than 70,000 people in Syria are among issues on which the former Cold War foes can work together.

“The United States believes that we share some very significant common interests with respect to Syria – stability
in the region, not having extremists creating problems throughout the region and elsewhere,” Kerry said.

Spotlight

In-depth coverage of escalating violence across Syria

In response, Putin said his government has agreed “to cooperate in maintaining the stability” in Syria and make sure the country does not descend into further violence, Al Jazeera’s David Chater, reporting from Moscow, said.

He also reported that Putin announced that he will hold separate one-on-one talks with President Barack Obama at the G-8 Summit in Northern Island on June 16 and 17.

Both the US and Russia endorsed a plan for a political solution for Syria last June but have differed over how to implement it.

Kerry said President Obama also believes Russia and the US could cooperate “significantly” on issues including North Korea, Iran and economic ties, which both sides said have not lived up to their potential.

Kerry’s visit is part of an effort to improve relations between Russia and the US, which have been strained by disagreements over issues including human rights and Syria since Putin’s return to the Kremlin a year ago.

Kerry also held a separate meeting and a joint press conference with Sergey Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister.

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BBG Governors Meet In Moscow To Discuss Future Of Russian Media

MOSCOW — BBG Governors Susan McCue and Michael Meehan were in Moscow from May 3 to May 7 to consider matters relevant to U.S. international media in Russia.

Governor McCue, who chairs the board of directors of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), and Governor Meehan, who chairs the BBG’s Strategy and Budget Committee and also serves on the RFE/RL board, met with RFE/RL Russian Service staff and with Radio Liberty veterans to strategize on how best to expand the reach of BBG broadcasters inside Russia. RFE/RL Acting President Kevin Klose also hosted a discussion with included Russia and media experts on how to involve U.S. international media in the Russian civil discourse and engage Russia’s civil society.

While in Moscow, the governors also met with U.S. Ambassador Michael McFaul, as well as human rights activists – among them, Lyudmila Alekseyeva — and journalists, including VOA Moscow Bureau Chief Jim Brooke.

Learn more at the BBG’s website.

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Medvedev Says Russian Rearmament On Level With WWII

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev says the current level of rearmament of Russia’s military is similar to the Soviet Union’s rearmament toward the end of World War II.

Medvedev was speaking to a group of veterans ahead of May 9 Victory Day celebrations marking the end of WWII in Europe.

Medvedev said some 75 percent of weapons currently used would be replaced with modern weapons before 2020.

Medvedev said the process is already well under way.

“I think it [the rearmament campaign] is only comparable to what we had during [WWII] and after the war,” he said.

All branches of Russia’s military have already been receiving new weapons.

The first new-generation Su-34 bombers were deployed to the Russian Air Force on May 6.

Based on reporting by ITAR-TASS and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Wreckage Of Missing Russian Plane Found

Aviation officials in Russia say they have found the wreckage of a plane that went missing in the Sverdlovsk region in June 2012.

The Federal Air Transport Agency says the Antonov light aircraft was discovered by hunters nose down in a swamp in a forest eight kilometers from the airstrip in Serov where it took off last year.

The plane disappeared shortly after an unauthorized takeoff, with 12 people on board, including the pilot and the city’s traffic police chief.

Investigators at the time suggested the group had been drinking and was using the plane to take an impromptu fishing trip.

The Emergency Situations Ministry has confirmed finding the remains of 11 of the crash victims.

Russia and the former Soviet republics have some of the world’s worst air-safety records.

Based on reporting by Reuters and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Council Of Muftis Allocates Quotas For 2013 Hajj

Russia’s Council of Muftis has met and decided how to allocate the 20,500 slots that Saudi Arabia has given Russia for the 2013 hajj in October.

Media reported on May 3 that the council met on April 29 in Moscow to debate the allocation.

Daghestan was given 8,000 spots, as compared to 8,450 in 2012.

Originally, the North Caucasus republic was offered just 4,000 spots, but the representatives of Tatarstan, Chechnya, Ingushetia, and Bashkortostan reportedly voluntarily gave up some of their slots in Daghestan’s favor.

On May 2, businessman Suleiman Kerimov, who represents Daghestan in Russia’s Federation Council, announced he will pay for 2,750 citizens of the impoverished republic to make the hajj, which is one of the most important religious rites of Islam.

Based on reporting by Kavkaz-uzel.ru and Tatar-inform

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian company confirms Iraq possess high potential for oil production

Russian oil company confirmed that Iraq has high potential for oil production, but they Astdrki: that take advantage of them require a stable environment in the country. He said the Iraqi government oil expert Hamza Jeweler in a press statement seen by term: that Iraq has five giant fields very supergiants and after the discovery of 100 field Finally, it is expected to identify five other fields giant giants. He added that the fifth round of licenses energy contracts will focus on gas only, and according to the information available, the coming decades will include a clause is very important is that Iraq in the event of the discovery of oil fields, a non-binding developed by foreign companies, unlike gas fields on companies that discover that their evolution . He Jeweler: that Iraq has 520 complex oil and gas geology, and the finder of which only 114, while the developer of these fields amounts to 23, explaining that “we have a lot, we did not take advantage of yet only a fraction of them.” And Abizaid: the focus on gas is designed to meet the needs of Iraq and the power plants of the many that have been developed recently, and to export gas to the world and specifically Europe, pointing out that there are efforts a real network connectivity gas pipeline passing through Turkey to Europe and through Egypt to Europe. And at the same level, announced that the Russian oil company Rosneft desire to contribute to the exploration and development activities in the Iraqi oil fields. The company’s CEO Igor Sechin said in a statement: that Iraq has high potential for oil production, but take advantage of them require a stable environment in the country, indicating we are confident that the large bilateral projects is effective only will allow the development of Iraq’s economy. It is said that CEO of Rosneft, the Russian oil Igor Sechin and president of Rustic Russian Technologies Sergei Chemezov, met recently with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and eternally willingness to make a technical review of the oil installations and support the activities of exploration and development of oil fields, according to data for them. Russian President Vladimir Putin has called for last year to boost his country’s presence in Iraq after a decline in the production of the Russian company Lukoil of oil during the past three years from its old fields in Siberia. It is worth mentioning that the Iraqi Oil Minister Abdul Karim and coffee confirmed earlier that Iraq’s oil production will reach 3.7 million barrels per day on average during this year, slightly less than the highest ever level of 3.8 million barrels, which was recorded in 1979, it is probable that the volume of exports up to 2.9 million barrels per day, including 250 thousand of the Kurdistan region.

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Sentences Pronounced In Deadly Russian Nightclub Fire

A court in the central Russian city of Perm has sentenced a prominent nightclub owner to nine years and 10 months in jail over a deadly fire in December 2009.

Anatoly Zak and four former associates in his Khromaya Loshad (Lame Horse) nightclub were found guilty of manslaughter on April 30.

The four were sentenced to prison terms of between four and six years.

Two former officials from the local fire-safety directorate were found guilty of negligence and sentenced to four and five years in jail respectively.

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Lame Horse nightclub co-owner Anatoly Zak in the dock in a Perm court in September 2010

The fire at the nightclub in Perm killed 156 people and injured dozens of others.

Investigators say the blaze was caused by fireworks used in the nightclub that set the ceiling alight.

The Perm provincial government resigned and several officials in the regional fire safety directorate were dismissed after the incident.

Based on reporting by ITAR-TASS and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Gessen Resigns As RFE/RL Russian Service Director

Masha Gessen, director of the Russian-language service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) for the past seven months, today announced her resignation from the position to begin work on a new book.
 
“Masha Gessen is an award-winning journalist who will continue to bring her insight, energy and activism to journalism — in the interest of civil society in Russia,” said RFE/RL Acting President and CEO Kevin Klose.
 
Gessen, author of the political biography of Vladimir Putin, “The Man Without a Face: The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin,” (Riverhead Press, 2012) is a 2013 winner of the 4th annual Media for Liberty award for “The Wrath of Putin,” published in Vanity Fair magazine last year.
 
Gessen also lectures on human rights, and is a regular contributor to The New York Times’ “Latitude” blog.
 
Klose said that in future, the Russian Service will be coordinated by senior editors in Prague, the network’s operations center and Moscow, where the service recently installed a state-of-the-art news bureau.
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Another Prominent Russian NGO Told To Register As ‘Foreign Agent’

Moscow’s prosecutor-general has urged the Memorial human rights center to comply with a new law on nongovernmental organizations requiring some NGOs to register as “foreign agents.”

Memorial’s leader, Aleksandr Cherkasov, told RFE/RL on April 30 that the prosecutor-general’s letter says that since the organization “receives financial support from abroad and is engaged in political activities” it must register under the law as a “foreign agent.”

FEATURE: Raids On NGOs Could Threaten Ordinary Russians

Cherkasov says his organization will not do so and will appeal the prosecutor’s request in court.

Last week, a court in Moscow imposed a $ 12,700 fine on Golos and a $ 3,200 fine on its leader for failing to register the organization as a foreign agent.

The legislation came into force in November.

Memorial was among the many civic groups whose offices were raided by Russian tax and other authorities during the subsequent crackdown.

President Vladimir Putin suggested recently that NGOs in Russia had received more than $ 1 billion from abroad in the first four months of this year.

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Sailor, Four Others Kidnapped Off Nigerian Coast

Pirates have kidnapped five foreign sailors — including a Russian sailor — after storming their container ship off Nigeria’s oil-producing southern coast.

The International Maritime Bureau — an international body which fights against crimes related to maritime trade and transportation — says the heavily armed pirates also broke into the ship’s safe and stole cash.

The attack occurred on April 25 but wasn’t reported by authorities to journalists until two days later.

The Russian Embassy in Nigeria confirmed that one of the five kidnapped sailors is a Russian citizen.

The others comprise nationals from Burma and Sri Lanka.

The kidnapping of foreign workers in Nigeria’s oil sector is on the rise.

Hostages are often released after a ransom payment is made.

Based on reporting by AFP and ITAR-TASS

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Disgraced Former Russian Olympics Official Says He Was Poisoned

Hardly a month goes by in Russia without a fresh scandal hitting the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

The latest blow came from Akhmed Bilalov, a disgraced former deputy head of Russia’s Olympic Committee, fired in February after being publicly upbraided by President Vladimir Putin over huge cost overruns and a two-year delay in the construction of the Sochi ski jump.

On April 27, Bilalov claimed that he was suffering from mercury poisoning after being exposed to the toxic substance at his Moscow office.

“They have found elevated levels of mercury in my body,” he told the Interfax news agency. I didn’t want to announce this before, but now that the press has found out, I’m forced to confirm it.”

Bilalov, 42, said he “began to feel bad in the middle of autumn last year” while still working at his Moscow office.

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Akhmed Bilalov, the ex-deputy head of Russia’s Olympic Committee

He said he had “no supposition yet” as to where the mercury came from, and that he “would not want to accuse anyone.” He added that he would take the matter to the police as soon as he returns to Moscow.

Bilalov’s revelation ended weeks of speculation about the mysterious ailment that allegedly forced him to abruptly leave Russia and seek treatment in Germany, where he has spent much of his time since being sidelined from the Olympic preparations.

Prosecutors last month opened a criminal case against the former official for allegedly embezzling $ 2.6 million from North Caucasus Resorts, the state-owned company that was building the ski jump and its adjacent facilities.

Bilalov also stands accused of misspending $ 97,000 during his tenure as head of the company, including funding a trip to London during the 2012 Olympics.

Putin also stripped him of that post.

Rising Costs, Environmental Damage

While Bilalov’s poisoning claims have met with a degree of disbelief, the respected online news portal Gazeta.ru says it has seen a copy of his medical report indicating that four times the normal amount of mercury had been found in his blood.

Aleksei Nevsky, Bilalov’s predecessor at the North Caucasus Resorts, stepped down earlier this year “for health reasons.”

Nevsky is also under investigation for mismanagement and embezzlement at the company.

Bilalov’s case has highlighted reports of vast corruption in the run-up to the Sochi Olympics.

According to estimates by Russia’s Audit Chamber, more than $ 500 million has already been misspent by state-run companies responsible for most Olympic constructions.

With less than a year until the launch, the total budget has swollen to five times original estimates. At a cost exceeding $ 50 billion, the Sochi games are on course to become the most expensive Olympics ever staged.

A number of private investors and wealthy oligarchs recruited by Putin to help fund the event, including Oleg Deripaska, are increasingly frustrated by rising costs and are demanding that the Russian government contribute more.

Reports of ruthless environmental damage in the region have further marred the event.

The World Wildlife Fun’s Russian branch has withdrawn its support for the games due to what it says is “great damage to the surrounding environment.”

In a strongly worded statement, the group warned that Olympic construction was “out of control” and accused Russian authorities of ignoring the recommendations of ecologists.

Greenpeace, too, has sounded the alarm over Olympic construction near pristine nature reserves protected as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Allegations of worker mistreatment have also surfaced.

Human Rights Watch says migrant workers employed at the Olympics building site in Sochi are routinely cheated out of wages and denied adequate rest, food, and housing.

The 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics are scheduled to kick off on February 7, 2014 and to run through to February 23.

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Minister Warns Of ‘Degrading’ Situation In Afghanistan

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Igor Morgulov is warning that Afghanistan will face new challenges because of the country’s “degrading political and military situation.”

He spoke on April 26 at the ministerial meeting of the Istanbul Process on Afghanistan in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

Morgulov said that with Afghanistan planning to hold a presidential election in 2014 and with most NATO troops withdrawing by the end of that year, instability could spread into to Central Asia and pose a “threat to Russia and its allies.”

He added that Afghanistan’s national reconciliation process has stalled.

The declaration of the Istanbul Process on Regional Security and Cooperation for a Secure and Stable Afghanistan was adopted in November 2011.

It was signed by Afghanistan, China, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, and the United Arab Emirates.

Based on reporting by ITAR-TASS and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Report: Russian Gay-Rights Activist Granted Spanish Asylum

Prominent Russian gay rights activist Aleksei Kiselyov has reportedly been granted political asylum in Spain.

A fellow gay rights activist based in Moscow, Nikolai Alekseyev, said that Spain gave Kiselyov asylum and a five-year permanent resident permit.

Kiselyov participated in a protest against the reelection of President Vladimir Putin on Moscow’s Bolotnaya Square in May 2012 that was violently dispersed by police.

Several activists who took part in the protest have been charged with organizing mass disorders.

Kiselyov told the group GayRussia on April 26 that he would return to Russia “only after Putin’s dictatorship regime is gone.”

Kiselyov also said Spain’s decision shows it understood “the political nature of the events on Bolotnaya Square.”

He is believed to be the first Russian activist to receive political asylum abroad in connection with the protest.

Based on reporting by gayrussia.ru and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Report: Russian Gay-Rights Activist Granted Spanish Asylum

Prominent Russian gay rights activist Aleksei Kiselyov has reportedly been granted political asylum in Spain.

A fellow gay rights activist based in Moscow, Nikolai Alekseyev, said that Spain gave Kiselyov asylum and a five-year permanent resident permit.

Kiselyov participated in a protest against the reelection of President Vladimir Putin on Moscow’s Bolotnaya Square in May 2012 that was violently dispersed by police.

Several activists who took part in the protest have been charged with organizing mass disorders.

Kiselyov told the group GayRussia on April 26 that he would return to Russia “only after Putin’s dictatorship regime is gone.”

Kiselyov also said Spain’s decision shows it understood “the political nature of the events on Bolotnaya Square.”

He is believed to be the first Russian activist to receive political asylum abroad in connection with the protest.

Based on reporting by gayrussia.ru and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Election Monitoring NGO Trial Begins

The trial of a prominent nongovernmental organization that independently monitors Russian elections has begun in Moscow.

The trial of the Golos (Voice) Association is the first to see the application of controversial legislation that came in force last November.

The law requires all NGOs in Russia that receive money from abroad and engage in political activity to register as foreign agents.

Golos leaders insist the law does not apply to them because their NGO stopped receiving financial support from abroad after the legislation went into effect.

Golos reported numerous violations in the 2011 parliamentary elections and 2012 presidential vote won by Vladimir Putin.

If found guilty, the organization could be fined up to 500,000 rubles ($ 16,000).

Its director could face a fine of up to 300,000 rubles ($ 10,000).

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Spaceship Hits Snag On Way To ISS

An unmanned Russian spaceship carrying 2.5 tons of cargo has failed to deploy a key antenna that helps it dock with the International Space Station (ISS).

Russian and U.S. space officials said the problem occurred just as the Progress spaceship settled into orbit after blasting off aboard a Soyuz rocket from the Baikonur launch pad Russia leases in Kazakhstan.

Russian engineers repeatedly tried but so far have failed to get the antenna unstuck.

A spokesman for Russia’s mission control said that even if the antenna failed to deploy, the cargo ship could still dock to the ISS on April 26 as planned.

Russia’s space agency, Roskosmos, said the Progress craft was carrying oxygen, water supplies, and food in addition to fuel and other replacement cargo to the ISS.

Based on reporting by AFP and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Billionaire Tops Britain’s Rich List

Russian metals magnate Alisher Usmanov has topped the “Sunday Times” list of the wealthiest people in Britain and Ireland.

The 59-year-old Uzbekistan-born owner of iron-ore producer Metalloinvest and of a 30 percent stake in the Arsenal soccer club has an estimated fortune of $ 20.3 billion.

Usmanov owns Sutton Place, the former residence of oil baron J. Paul Getty, and a mansion in London.

Second place on the list went to fellow Russian Len Blavatnik, who owns Warner Music and who last month sold a stake in oil giant TNK-BP for $ 2 billion.

Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich — owner of the Chelsea soccer club — was ranked fifth.

According to the “Sunday Times” list, the top 200 richest people in Britain control a combined wealth of $ 485 billion.

Based on reporting by AFP, “The Telegraph,” and “The Sunday Times”

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Becomes Oldest Spacewalker Ever

A 59-year-old Russian cosmonaut has become the oldest human to walk in space.

Pavel Vinogradov took part in maintenance work outside the International Space Station on April 19.

Until then, the oldest spacewalker had been retired NASA astronaut Story Musgrave, who was 58 when he helped fix the Hubble Space Telescope in 1993.

The 6 1/2-hour space walk went well outside of one incident when Vinogradov lost his grip on an experimental tray that he was retrieving.

Officials said the lost aluminum panel should not pose a safety hazard to the station, although it will add to the booming population of space junk.

Based on reporting by Reuters and AP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian TV Host ‘Sorry’ For Ukrainian Massacre Joke

Popular Russian comedian Ivan Urgant struck an unusually contrite tone on April 17 as he wrapped up his daily late-night television show.

Urgant delivered what appeared to be a heartfelt apology for his earlier joke about the massacre of Ukrainian civilians by Soviet security services.

The remark had caused an uproar in Ukraine and prompted an angry statement from the country’s Foreign Ministry.

The TV celebrity said he had meant no harm and regretted his “unfortunate” jest.

“Believe me, I truly had no intention to offend anyone. I simply said a foolish thing without thinking. I could not imagine that the unfortunate joke I made in a humorous program, a program in which I never say anything seriously, could spark such an acute reaction in Ukraine, a country I love very much,” Urgant said.

“Believe me, I absolutely did not put in this foolish sentence the monstrous chauvinistic meaning that some people perceived.”

Urgant’s widely admired evening show, appropriately titled “Evening Urgant,” is modeled on the U.S. “Late Show With David Letterman” and is broadcast Monday to Friday on Channel One, Russia’s top state-owned channel.

The controversial joke was aired on a Saturday on one of his other shows, “Smak,” in which he interviews celebrities while cooking with them.

The comedian uttered the apparently spontaneous remark during the preparation of a soup with celebrated screenwriter Aleksandr Adabashyan: “I chopped these greens like a red commissar did the residents of a Ukrainian village.”

As Adabashyan wiped the knife clean, Urgant then quipped: “You have cleaned my blade.”

“I am just shaking off the villagers’ remnants,” the screenwriter responded, much to the audience’s amusement.

Although it is unclear what historical event Urgant was referring to, his jibe drew a barrage of criticism in Ukraine, where the tragedies suffered under Soviet rule are no laughing matter.

An estimated 2 million Ukrainian civilians were killed in the years that followed the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.

Millions more died in the famine brought on by Soviet mass collectivization in the early 1930s. Many Ukrainians consider the famine a genocide against the Ukrainian people, a contention that has long troubled relations with Moscow.

Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry was quick to react to the offensive “Smak” episode, condemning Urgant’s comment in strong terms and demanding a formal explanation from Channel One.

“In the modern, civilized world, such jokes are considered bad taste and disrespectful toward the millions of victims of a totalitarian regime,” the ministry said it a statement released on April 16.

To stress the point, a group of disgruntled Ukrainians flung tomatoes at a picture of Urgant outside the Russian Embassy in Kyiv.

The TV host had already apologized on Twitter for his “inappropriate comment,” but Ukrainian authorities said this did not amount to an apology.

Urgant, it’s true, had somewhat undermined his act of contrition by jokingly pledging to cook only Ukrainian national dishes on his show and call all his future children — regardless whether boys or girls — Bohdan, a traditional Ukrainian name.

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Duma Deputy Aide Shot Dead In Ulyanovsk

A local businessman and aide to a deputy in the Russian Duma has been killed in the city of Ulyanovsk in the Volga region.

A local police spokesman in Ulyanovsk said Roman Sagdeyev, 43, was found dead with gunshot wounds in the fitness club at Ulyanovsk’s Arena sports center early on October 11.

An investigation has been launched into the incident.

Sagdeyev was an aide to the Duma Deputy Vladislav Tretyak.

Tretyak, a former goalkeeper for the Soviet Union’s national ice-hockey team, is a world celebrity considered to be one of the greatest goalkeepers in the history of ice hockey.

Based on reporting by RIA Novosti and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Protesters Picket Over Changes To RFE/RL’s Russian Service

MOSCOW — Some 30 people have rallied in Moscow to protest the upcoming end of medium-wave broadcasts by RFE/RL’s Russian Service and its subsequent restructuring.

Kirill Filimonov, the protest’s coordinator and a former intern for the service, said he was briefly detained during the protest.

RFE/RL is a private media company funded by the U.S. Congress.

Medium-wave broadcasts by RFE/RL’s Russian Service will end on November 10, in compliance with a new media law restricting foreign ownership of a broadcast license.

Similar laws exist in Europe and the United States.

This has led to a restructuring of the service, including the buyouts of a number of staffers.

Addressing the changes, Julia Ragona, a vice president at RFE/RL, said: “The times and technology have changed. And we must too. As a result, RFE/RL is investing, not divesting money in Russia, to reach broader target audiences.”

“Our goal is to keep the legacy of Svoboda’s incredible history alive and the best way to do that is to provide more forward-leaning and interactive digital content. We believe that our new strategy, along with Masha Gessen’s leadership as director, will enable us to do precisely that,” Ragona said. 

With reporting from Ekho Moskvy 

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Protesters Picket Over Changes To RFE/RL’s Russian Service

MOSCOW — Some 30 people have rallied in Moscow to protest the upcoming end of medium-wave broadcasts by RFE/RL’s Russian Service and its subsequent restructuring.

Kirill Filimonov, the protest’s coordinator and a former intern for the service, said he was briefly detained during the protest.

RFE/RL is a private media company funded by the U.S. Congress.

Medium-wave broadcasts by RFE/RL’s Russian Service will end on November 10, in compliance with a new media law restricting foreign ownership of a broadcast license.

Similar laws exist in Europe and the United States.

This has led to a restructuring of the service, including the buyouts of a number of staffers.

Addressing the changes, Julia Ragona, a vice president at RFE/RL, said: “The times and technology have changed. And we must too. As a result, RFE/RL is investing, not divesting money in Russia, to reach broader target audiences.”

“Our goal is to keep the legacy of Svoboda’s incredible history alive and the best way to do that is to provide more forward-leaning and interactive digital content. We believe that our new strategy, along with Masha Gessen’s leadership as director, will enable us to do precisely that,” Ragona said. 

With reporting from Ekho Moskvy 

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Court Delays Pussy Riot Defendants’ Appeal

A Russian court has opened and then adjourned for more than a week the appeal hearing for three members of the punk collective Pussy Riot.

The hearing came amid a heavy security presence at the Moscow city court.

In August, the three women were convicted on charges of hooliganism and inciting religious hatred, and sentenced to two years in prison for performing a song against President Vladimir Putin in Moscow’s Orthodox cathedral.

The judge adjourned the appeal hearing after one of the three women, Yekaterina Samutsevich, said she had fired her lawyers.

It was reset for October 10.

The three prisoners — Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alyokhina, and Samutsevic — were allowed to participate in the hearing.

On September 30, the Russian Orthodox Church urged the three women to repent, suggesting it could help them win leniency from the court.

In a statement, the church said that if the women make statements showing “repentance and regret,” their words “shouldn’t be left unnoticed.”

The women’s sentencing sparked an international outcry and has polarized Russia, pitting Putin’s staunchest critics against his considerable and well-connected supporters.

The powerful pro-Kremlin youth group Nashi’s “commissar,” Konstantin Goloskokov, recently announced a 50,000-ruble (about $ 18,000) bounty for information on the whereabouts of other Pussy Riot members and said Nashi was collecting money through the Internet to increase that “prize fund.”

The European Parliament has nominated the jailed Pussy Riot members for a prestigious human rights prize named after Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov, sparking criticism from Moscow.

Based on reporting by AP and dpa

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Duma Speaker To Snub Council Of Europe

The speaker of Russia’s lower house of parliament has said he will not attend the October 1 session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) in Strasbourg.

Duma speaker Sergei Naryshkin told Russian media that he would not go because “we felt that my big strategic proposals were unlikely to be heard by a number of Parliamentary Assembly leaders and some Russophobic delegations.”

He said he would have spoken to the assembly about “big problems in the development of parliamentarism in Europe [and] about forming a frontier-free Europe” but that “it looks like they are more interested in something else.”

During its upcoming session, PACE is due to discuss follow-up to Russia’s recent Pussy Riot judgment, in which three members of the activist punk collective were sentenced to two years in jail.

Moscow has rejected criticism over the case as meddling in its internal affairs.

Based on reporting by ITAR-TASS and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Youth Group Offers Reward For Free Pussy Riot Members

The Russian youth group Nashi is offering a bounty to anyone who provides information on the location of members of the feminist performance group Pussy Riot who are still at large.

Nashi “commissar” Konstantin Goloskokov announced the 50,000-ruble (about $ 18,000) bounty and said the group was collecting money through the Internet to increase the “prize fund” for information on the whereabouts of other Pussy Riot members.

Three members of the group are in jail after being convicted last month of “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred” for their performance of a “punk prayer” in Moscow’s Christ the Savior Cathedral in February.

It is not clear how many members there are in the group and at least two other members of the group reportedly fled the country.

Based on reporting by Vesti.ru and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Miracle Escape For Russian Trucker

A video is making the rounds of a driver’s death-defying escape when his truck gets slammed into nearly head-on by a semi-trailer truck on a Russian highway.

The man manages to cling to his steering wheel as he’s hurled through his windshield before easing himself onto the highway to survey the destruction:

Russia is near-legendary in the YouTube Age for its vehicular mishaps.

A video emerged in December under a similar meme, showing a driver’s “miracle escape” on a snow-slicked Russian highway:

But the video that takes the cake in terms of good fortune might well be this one, also shared by RT, from the dashboard of a car that spins out of control after splitting head-on traffic and skidding blindly by a truck speeding at it:

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Lab Denies It’s The Source Of Sheep-Killing Vaccine

The director of a major Russian laboratory has denied his institute is the source of a smallpox vaccine that is thought to have wiped out thousands of sheep in Central Asia.

Denis Kolbasov, who heads the Research Institute for Veterinary Virology and Microbiology in Russia, says the vaccine in question is a counterfeit that has been mislabeled as his lab’s product.

Uzbek and Kyrgyz farmers and officials said on September 24 that thousands of sheep had died in those countries after receiving vaccines that appeared to come from Kolbasov’s institution in the town of Pokrov.

Kolbasov said later the same day that his organization had not distributed the vaccine to Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan this year, adding that the samples sent to his lab from Uzbekistan looked fake.

He said neither the product’s packaging nor its content corresponded to a product from his lab.

Kolbasov added that he was unable to say what caused the mass deaths.

Uzbek farmers and officials say thousands of sheep died in the Qashqadariyo, Samarkand, and Jizakh regions after allegedly receiving a tainted smallpox vaccine.

In Kyrgyzstan, authorities in the southern region of Jalal-Abad were probing the deaths of 1,700 sheep, also following their vaccination for smallpox. Authorities have sealed off Jalal-Abad’s Suzaq and Aksy districts to try and limit the chances of the danger spreading.

Based on reporting by RFE/RL’s Uzbek and Kyrgyz services

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

The Russian Federation and Islamism

Posted GMT 9-21-2012 23:58:33

The Russian Federation in the Caucasus region continues to be challenged by Islamism whereby two powerful forces are at play. One applies to the Islamist dream of dismantling parts of the Russian Federation in order to impose Sharia Islamic law and unify various different ethnic groups which are mainly Muslim. The other applies to destroying indigenous Islam and transplanting it with imported ideas from Saudi Arabia and Qatar. Chechnya may now be over the worse of the brutal insurgency which witnessed fluctuating alliances. However, can the Russian Federation claim that the cultural influence of this nation still runs through the veins of Chechnya? Or does Chechnya resemble an Islamist state being ruled by a firm Chechen grip which remains loyal to Moscow — but which is drifting culturally outside of the grip of the Russian Federation?

In Dagestan this issue is very real alongside many other major important issues. The multi-ethnicity of Dagestan which is overwhelmingly Muslim is extremely diverse. However, the Islamist agenda is too crush nationalist forces, defeat indigenous Islam and to sever the control of Moscow. Therefore, a raging insurgency continues in Dagestan whereby central forces are faced by Islamists on several fronts.

Chechnya once was the main focus of attention throughout the restive Caucasus region. However, in modern times it is clear that Dagestan will dictate how parts of the region will be governed. Dagestan isn’t witnessing the intensive bloodshed which flowed at the height of the Chechen crisis. Despite this, the insurgency continues to threaten the stability of Dagestan and the entire region.

President Magomedsalam Magomedov of Dagestan hinted in late August of the need to establish self-defense units. This was debated during an important meeting with the Coordination Council for Law Enforcement in Dagestan and the Security Council of Dagestan. It is difficult to believe that the leader of Dagestan didn’t consult with powerful players in Moscow and within various security agencies.

Magomedsalam Magomedov commented that “I think that today we will make the decision to set up, under the auspices of the law enforcement agencies, self-defense units, squads of young people prepared to provide safety, (and) punish those bandits and terrorists.” This statement clearly implies that the main aim is to fight terrorism within Dagestan followed by criminality which often flows naturally. Yet it remains to be seen how these self-defense groups will work with the Federal Security Service.

Recently in Dagestan Said Efendi Chirkeisky was killed by an Islamist suicide bomber who had been indoctrinated. Said Efendi Chirkeisky was the main Sufi spiritual leader in Dagestan and clearly he opposed Islamism, terrorism and radical forces within Salafi Islam. He had hoped to build bridges but to Islamists he was just an infidel who needed to be taken out of the equation in order to spread more hate, suspicion and fear.

Roman Silantyev told Interfax that “The treacherous practice of negotiating with terrorists should be stopped. A total war must be launched against them, with a particular emphasis on elimination of their abettors. Otherwise, Russia will become a second Iraq.”

Traditional Islam clearly faces deadly Islamist forces whereby the Salafists want to implant their draconian and rigid form of Islam on society. At the same time, in Russian dominated areas surrounding volatile regions it is clear that a growing gap is emerging. Political leaders in Moscow face many competing forces in the Caucasus region. This applies to nationalism, terrorism, Islamization, power of the center, a never ending insurgency, corruption, poverty, cultural issues and outside forces which seek to weaken the Russian Federation.

Mairbek Vatchagaev, The Jamestown Foundation, clearly believes that self-defense forces will be detrimental to Dagestan because of the threat of Balkanization. Therefore, the author states that “Dagestan remains the deadliest territory in the North Caucasus. Two-thirds of the attacks by the North Caucasian armed opposition are launched against the Dagestani authorities and the republican government’s forces. Following the appointment of the new Dagestani rebel emir, who comes from an area that has been dominated by Salafis since 1997, violence, including attacks on the police forces and suicide bombings, will continue. Finally, the establishment of new structures like the personal guard proposed by President Magomedov to fight the insurgents will not change the situation but may further lead to the Balkanization of the North Caucasus whereby personal militias of respective nationalities are entrusted with defending ethnic territories under the guise of terrorism, whether they be Cossacks, Avars, Dargins, Kumyks, or Lezgins.”

Therefore, it is clear that the Russian Federation faces many competing forces and unlike Chechnya, the ethnic angle in Dagestan is much more complex. Currently it appears that Islamists are “on the front foot” in Dagestan but looks can be deceptive. Either way the battle of “the soul of Islam” is being waged in Dagestan and in other parts of the Caucasus region. The same applies to the power and influence of the Russian Federation and if the center can preserve “real power” within the restive Caucasus region.

By Jibril Khoury and Lee Jay Walker
www.moderntokyotimes.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Russian Deputy PM To Discuss Troop Presence In Tajikistan

DUSHANBE — Russian Deputy Prime Minster Igor Shuvalov has arrived in Dushanbe to discuss issues with Tajik officials including a possible extension of a troop deployment in Tajikistan beyond 2014.

Shuvalov’s visit follows the visit of Russian Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov to the Tajik capital last week.

Tajikistan and Russia have been negotiating the issue of the presence of Russia’s 201st Motorized Rifle Division for some time now.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in April that the lease for the three Russian-controlled garrisons in Tajikistan, which shares a poorly secured border with Afghanistan, would be extended by 49 years.

Russia’a 201st Division and its approximately 7,500 troops use a total of three Tajik bases near Dushanbe and in the southern cities of Kulob and Qurghon-Teppa.

It is the largest deployment of Russian troops abroad.

Based on reporting by Interfax and RFE/RL’s Tajik Service

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian, Kyrgyz Leaders Meet To Discuss Base, Energy Projects

Russian President Vladimir Putin has met with Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambaev outside Bishkek to discuss the terms of a Russian military base in Kyrgyzstan, the participation of Russian companies in Kyrgyz hydropower projects, and the issue of Kyrgyzstan’s $ 500 million debt to Russia.

Putin was quoted by Russian media as saying, “Times change but relations between our people invariably stay good.”

Putin mentioned a “set of important agreements” would be signed before he departed Kyrgyzstan.

Among those agreements are prolonging Russia’s use of a military base near Bishkek until 2032 with a fixed rent for Russia of $ 4.5 million annually.

Other agreements set the terms for completing Soviet-era hydropower projects that would greatly alleviate Kyrgyzstan’s chronic energy shortages.

Based on reporting by ITAR-TASS and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Soyuz Lands With Russian, U.S. Crew In Kazakhstan

A Russian Soyuz capsule with three crew members aboard — two Americans and a Russia — has safely landed in central Kazakhstan after 123 days at the International Space Station (ISS).

The Soyuz craft remains the only means for international astronauts to reach the space station since the decommissioning of the U.S. Shuttle fleet in 2011.

Moscow hoped the smooth landing will help to ease concerns over relying solely on Russia to service the space station following a string of recent mishaps in its space program.

Three crew members remain on the ISS.

They will be joined by another trio due to blast off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan next month.

Based on reporting by AP, Reuters, and AFP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Ten Killed In Russian Road Accident

Russian authorities say 10 people were killed overnight when a minivan they were traveling in veered into the path of an oncoming truck.

The Emergency Situations Ministry says the vehicles collided on a highway in the southern Stavropol region.

NTV quoted Alexei Safarov, the acting traffic police chief for the Stavropol region, as saying that the 10 people in the minivan were traveling to a wedding party in a nearby village.

Based on reporting by AP and NTV

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Four Russian Tourists Killed In Greece Bus Crash

The Russian Consulate in the Greek city of Thessaloniki has confirmed that four Russian tourists were killed and 30 injured when a bus that was taking them to the airport crashed in the predawn hours.

The Greek driver of the bus was also injured.

There were reportedly 50 Russians on the bus — 49 tourists and a guide — and they were scheduled to depart on a flight to St. Petersburg on September 14.

The bus apparently skidded off the road in a light rain and overturned.

Based on reporting by Interfax and AP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

The Arms Race Gets Dirty: Russian Scientist Files Patent For New Biological Weapon

Just a few short months after U.S. President Barack Obama indicated a willingness to negotiate with Russia on making further cuts to the two countries’ respective nuclear arsenals, it now seems that Moscow could be well placed to open up a new front in the arms race.

That’s because St. Petersburg scientist Aleksandr Semenov has filed a patent for a terrifying new “biological” weapon that could strike fear into the heart of any enemy.

According to the plans he has submitted for review in Russia, Semenov wants to design a tank shell whose explosive payload would also include the solid waste produced by the armored vehicle’s crew. (As the above diagram clearly illustrates, crew members would simply deposit the waste into a shell compartment directly, before sealing it and firing it at the enemy.)

Semenov appears convinced that the weapon could signify a major advance in the history of conventional warfare.

“Nuclear weapons are history,” the Czech news website aktualne.cz quotes him as saying. “They are absolute and destroy everything around them. The same applies to bacteriological and chemical weapons. We are proposing alternative armaments, which are not fatal. They are humane and they do not breach any UN conventions.”

According to Marc Abrahams, who received an English translation of the patent application and wrote about it in “The Guardian,” this innovative new weapons system would be ideal for use under battle conditions, where tank crews often spend long periods trapped in the confined space of their armored vehicles.

Not only would it have a “psychological positive effect” on the tank crew by sparing them from having to endure the stench of their own feces, it would undoubtedly have “additional military-psychological and military-political effects” on any combatant who was unfortunate enough to be in the line of fire.

The use of such missiles may also conceivably put a damper on the much-vaunted use of “shock-and-awe” tactics in modern warfare, as any combatant who tried to use shock-and-awe tactics to scare the s**t out of their enemy could find such an approach counterproductive.

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian Prosecutor Says Activists’ Sentence Too Harsh

The prosecutor in Russia’s western Smolensk region has said that a sentence against a prominent opposition activist is too harsh.

Taisiya Osipova, an activist from the Other Russia movement, was sentenced last month to eight years in a penal colony on drug dealing charges.

Osipova was arrested in November 2010.

Her lawyers say the case against her was manufactured in order to put pressure on her husband, Sergei Fomchenkov, a senior member of Other Russia.

The court handed Osipova a 10-year sentence in December.
 
The regional court in Smolensk ordered a new trial in February.

The European Parliament passed a resolution on September 13 condemning Russia’s use of its judiciary for political purposes, mentioning Osipova among Russian opposition activists being prosecuted because of their political views.

Based on reporting by ITAR-TASS and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Russian PM Says Keeping Pussy Riot Members In Jail ‘Unproductive’

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has said it’s “unproductive” for members of the Pussy Riot group to spend more time behind bars.

Three members of the feminist punk band were sentenced last month to two years in prison for “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred” for performing a protest song against President Vladimir Putin in Moscow’s Orthodox cathedral.

They had already spent more than five months in jail when they were convicted.

Medvedev, in comments quoted by Interfax, said he would not want to “take the judge’s place,” but that in his view it would be sufficient for the women to serve suspended sentences.

Medvedev’s comments came at a meeting with members of the ruling United Russia party.

The imprisonment of the three women has drawn protests around the world.

Based on reporting  by AFP, AP, and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Putin Signs Decree Protecting Strategic Russian Firms

Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed a decree aimed at protecting the interests of strategic companies like Gazprom that operate outside Russia.

The decree says Russian strategic firms that work abroad must obtain government permission before disclosing information to foreign regulators, changing contracts, or selling property abroad.

It also obliges the government to refuse permission to disclose information “capable of damaging the economic interests of the Russian Federation.”

The European Union last week launched an antitrust investigation into Gazprom’s pricing practices in Central and Eastern Europe.

The EU is asking why Gazprom has linked the price of natural gas to oil prices.

It also suspects Gazprom has hindered competition by restricting the free flow of gas to Europe and by preventing other countries from diversifying their supply sources.

Based on reporting by ITAR-TASS and Reuters

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Lost In Translation: Russian TV Misquotes French Singer On Pussy Riot

A Russian television channel has apologized to French singer Mireille Mathieu for severely distorting her remarks on the Pussy Riot case.

The state-run TV-Tsentr on August 30 aired an interview with Mathieu in which she appears to slam Russian feminist punk collective Pussy Riot for performing an anti-Kremlin song in Moscow’s largest cathedral.

Three members of the group were sentenced last month to two years in prison for the performance.

In the Russian voiceover of the interview, Mathieu, who enjoys enduring popularity in Russia, condemns the Pussy Riot trio in strong terms.

“I think they are deranged and I condemn their action,” is how the Russian TV voiceover translated her words from French. “A church is not the place for such actions. A church has always been and will remain a place where people come to see the light, where they come for the purification of the soul. It is a sacred place that needs to be respected, especially Russian churches, where one feels so much fervor and zeal.”

Supporters of Pussy Riot reacted angrily to Mathieu’s comments.

Her remarks also drew a barrage a criticism from the French press, which has been mostly sympathetic to the plight of the three women.

The trouble is that Mathieu never called Pussy Riot “deranged.”

In fact, the singer called for clemency toward the jailed women in her interview — a detail TV-Tsentr’s journalists left out of their report.

“I think these young women [of Pussy Riot] were a bit mindless to sing in a church” is what Mathieu actually said. “It’s not an appropriate place. There are other ways to demonstrate. A church is a place of contemplation and respect. Here in Russia it’s like a sacrilege. There is such fervor in churches here. But as a women, an artist, and a Christian, I wish for clemency [for the Pussy Riot members].”

The channel’s deputy director, Vyacheslav Mostovoi, said the channel’s leadership was “simply in shock” and pledged the author of the interview would be fined and banned from broadcasting.

– Claire Bigg

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Five Russian Troops Reported Killed In Ingushetia Attack

Authorities in Russia’s restive North Caucasus republic of Ingushetia say at least five Russian Interior Ministry toops have been killed and one injured in an attack on their military convoy.

Officials said troops have started a special operation to locate and detain the attackers following the ambush near Datykh in the district of Sunzha.

The state-run Russian International News Agency (RIA Novosti) said the attackers set off explosions as the convoy was passing, then opened fire with guns and grenade launchers.

Violence between suspected Islamic militants and security forces in Russia’s North Caucasus region leaves scores of people dead and injured each year.

Volatile republics in the region include Ingushetia, Daghestan, Chechnya, and Kabardino-Balkaria.

Based on reporting by Interfax and ITAR-TASS

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Embattled Russian Lawmaker Says Kremlin Behind Bid To Remove Him

A 56-year-old former KGB agent — and still a colonel in the reserves of the Federal Security Service (FSB) — seems like an unlikely face of Russia’s political opposition.

But that is just what Gennady Gudkov, a State Duma deputy with the left-leaning A Just Russia party, has become. Since the December 2011 Duma elections and, particularly, since the March 2012 presidential vote — both of which Gudkov argues were grossly falsified in favor of Vladimir Putin and his ruling United Russia party — he has become an increasingly strident critic of the Kremlin.

Now, he faces a showdown, as the Prosecutor-General’s Office on September 3 sent to the Duma a request that the legislature strip Gudkov of his mandate because of alleged commercial activities that are incompatible with his status as a deputy.

“The Russian Investigative Committee has sent additional materials to the State Duma regarding, in particular, [Gudkov's] involvement in the management of a private security firm called the Pantan Security Agency through commercial organizations under his control,” committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said.

But Gudkov, speaking to RFE/RL’s Russian Service on September 1, rejected the charges, saying that although he owned shares in the company, he did not participate in its management.

Gudkov said the push against him stemmed from a direct order from the Kremlin to remove his mandate before the opposition’s next national political rally — under the March of Millions slogan — planned for September 15. Gudkov is an organizer of the unsanctioned demonstration and is expected to speak at the rally in Moscow.

Gudkov said he believed the United Russia majority in the Duma will ramrod through a motion based on the prosecutor’s request during its session on September 12.

“I am completely convinced that the date September 12 is completely logical from the point of view of our government servants, since they think that it is necessary to ‘shut down’ Gudkov and the rest of the opposition, evidently, on September 15-16. I am using the kind of language that they use,” Gudkov said.

“Deputy Gudkov’s mandate is a big obstacle to them in this process. They need to find a way to take away that mandate on September 12; otherwise it is unclear how they will be able to arrest the leaders of the opposition or those who speak at that rally.”

Gudkov added that he was not optimistic about his prospects when the vote is taken. “I definitely expect a biased political decision because I know for a fact that a command has come down from the Kremlin to remove Gudkov’s mandate by any means,” he said.

On The Attack

Nonetheless, Gudkov remains defiant. He said he had sent letters to 50 United Russia deputies for whom he has “respect on a personal level,” urging them not to vote for “an extrajudicial political lynching.” Although some ruling-party lawmakers, including Aleksandr Khinshtein, have said they will not vote to remove Gudkov, such a mass lapse in United Russia party discipline would be unprecedented.

Almost as soon as the Investigative Committee submitted its new documentation to the Duma on September 3, United Russia leaders in the Duma went on the attack.

Duma Deputy Speaker Sergei Neverov told journalists he believed Gudkov’s business interests constituted a conflict of interest. “You have to decide for yourself: either you’re actively involved in business or you are elected to the State Duma and become limited in this regard,” he said.

United Russia Duma faction leader Andrei Vorobyov echoed the sentiment the same day, saying, “Nobody who is vested with authority in our country is allowed to be directly involved in business.”

‘They Are The Traitors’

Gudkov, a former KGB foreign counterintelligence officer who left active duty in 1992, particularly bristles at United Russia accusations that he is a “traitor” for supporting the anti-Putin opposition.

“They have no right at all to consider anyone a traitor or not a traitor. They are the ones who betrayed the secret services. They are the ones who betrayed the principles of those services. They are the ones who destroyed them and turned their agencies into commercial structures,” he said.

“They are the ones who today are brazenly forcing officers of the special services to violate the laws on investigative activity, the Constitution of Russia, which guarantees freedom of private communication. They are the ones who force officers of the Federal Security Service to use the entire arsenal of methods that have been given them to protect the state against serious threats, to use them against the opposition,” Gudkov continued.

“They are traitors. They are traitors because they have betrayed all the principles that have to operate in any normal, civilized country.”

Former Federation Council Chairman and A Just Russia party founder Sergei Mironov says the party will fight to support Gudkov. In an interview with Russian television, Mironov said he believed United Russia does not have the right to revoke the mandate of an elected deputy, but that with the support of the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, a party headed by nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky that routinely votes with United Russia, they will do so.

And, like Gudkov, Mironov said he was certain that the prosecutors and the ruling-party lawmakers are acting at the behest of the Kremlin. “We understand perfectly well that the gentlemen from United Russia never do anything at all without an order from above,” he said.

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty