Russia 110811 Basic Political Developments


Armenian families left for Russia with Compatriots project



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Armenian families left for Russia with Compatriots project


http://en.trend.az/regions/scaucasus/armenia/1916858.html
[11.08.2011 10:26]

A total of 600 families from Lori and Shirak regions of Armenia left for various regions of Russia with support of the Compatriots project, which was elaborated by Russian government, News.am reporeted. The project is over and will not be resumed. Consul General of Russia to Gyumri Vasily Korchmar disapproved the information that the project will start again.

"The project intended not to force Armenians to leave the state but to strengthen the relation between the two states," the Consul General emphasized. "The project was initiated in 2006, approved in 2010 and completed in 2011."

Armenian families who left for Russia will have jobs, compensation and registration in a short while.

Another similar project started by the Government of Poland.

10:01 11/08/2011ALL NEWS


Medvedev nominates candidature of governor of Tula Reg-adds





http://www.itar-tass.com/en/c154/202088.html

MOSCOW, August 11 (Itar-Tass) —— Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has submitted the candidature of Vladimir Gruzdev for consideration of the Duma of the Tula Region to invest him with powers of governor of the region, the Kremlin press service reported on Thursday.

The United Russia party offered three candidatures to the post of Tula governor to the president on August 5. Vladimir Gruzdev, who was appoint by the president to the post of active head of the region, was among them. He replaced Vyacheslav Dudka whose resignation Medvedev accepted on July 29.

Vladimir Gruzdev, 44, is a well-known entrepreneur, one of the owners of the Seventh Continent network. Since 2006 he is on the list of Russian multimillionaires compiled by the journal Finance. He was a deputy of the State Duma of the fourth convocation and since 2007 occupies the post of first deputy chairman of the Committee of Civil, Criminal, Arbitration and Judicial Procedure Legislation of the State Duma now. Gruzdev is a member of the General Council and member of the presidium of the Moscow City Regional Department of the United Russia party.


Medvedev proposes acting Tula Region governor for permanent post


http://www.prime-tass.com/news/_Medvedev_proposes_acting_Tula_Region_governor_for_permanent_post/0/%7BB48A7869-302F-4E03-AF21-C8C9F8A295E0%7D.uif
MOSCOW, Aug 11 (PRIME) -- Russian President Dmitry Medvedev put forward acting Governor of the Tula Region Vladimir Gruzdev as a candidate to be nominated as the permanent regional governor, the Kremlin’s press service said Thursday, RIA Novosti reported.

The proposal is to be considered by the regional legislative house.

Earlier in August, the United Russia party chose a number of gubernatorial candidates for the Tula Region, including Gruzdev.

Under current legislation, political parties with a majority in regional legislatures have the right to propose at least three candidates for the positions of regional heads. The president then nominates one of the candidates, who the regional legislature can then approve or reject.

Vyacheslav Dudka, the region’s former governor, resigned on his own accord on July 29.

End


11.08.2011 12:20

Russia to allocate $8 billion to build space center in Far East


http://en.rian.ru/science/20110811/165701405.html
07:04 11/08/2011
MOSCOW, August 11 (RIA Novosti)

Russia will allocate about 250 billion rubles ($8.4 billion) to build the Vostochny space center in Far East, the head of the country's space agency Roscosmos said on Thursday.

Russia currently uses two launch sites: Baikonur in Kazakhstan, which it has leased since the end of the Soviet Union, and Plesetsk in northwest Russia.

So far ground infrastructure, as well as technical and launch complexes are being designed, Roscosmos chief Vladimir Popovkin said in an interview with the Kommersant daily.

"About 250 billion rubles are to be allocated for the construction," he said.

The Russian government earlier said it intended to spend 24.7 billion rubles (around $800 million) during the first three years of the construction of the space center, billed as a "new stage in the development of Russian cosmonautics."

The construction of Vostochny is scheduled to begin this year and end in 2016, with the first rocket launch to take place in 2015 and the first manned flight due in 2018.

The vast facility in the Amur Region will eventually include two launch pads, a training center and oxygen and hydrogen generation plants.

Popovkin also said the agency is currently studying space launch insurance, following the loss of three Glonass satellites last December. The satellites, meant to conclude the formation of Russia's Glonass navigation system, were lost when a Proton-M carrier rocket veered off course and crashed in the Pacific Ocean in December.

"The idea is to include the insurance into the satellite's cost. This is worldwide practice. But every case will be considered individually," Popovkin said. "We plan to select a group of insurance companies, from which we would choose a suitable one to insure our risks."

According to expert estimates, the losses from the failed launch could stand at about 2.5 billion rubles ($840 million).


Four hundred illegal immigrants arrested near Moscow airport


http://en.rian.ru/russia/20110811/165705078.html
11:31 11/08/2011
MOSCOW, August 11 (RIA Novosti)

More than 400 illegal immigrants have been arrested near Moscow's Bykovo Airport, police said on Thursday.

"It was revealed that Tajik and Uzbek nationals have been living illegally in the area of Bykovo Airport," an Interior Ministry statement said. "Over 400 people have been rounded up."

Last month, 72 illegal immigrants were arrested in a makeshift camp in western Moscow. In April, police uncovered an illegal underground city in the same area which even had its own mosque.

Earlier this week, Russia's Supreme Court upheld a ban on the ultra-right Movement Against Illegal Immigration (DPNI) which calls for curbs on the inflow of migrants.

08:24 11/08/2011ALL NEWS

Trial in case of Manege Square mass disorders to begin in Moscow


http://www.itar-tass.com/en/c154/202022.html

MOSCOW, August 11 (Itar-Tass) — Moscow’s Tverskoi Court on Thursday will begin the trial of a high-profile criminal case of December mass disorders at Manezhnaya (Manege) Square in the centre of the RF capital.

The court will hold a preliminary hearing on Thursday. It will be held behind closed doors, according to the law.

The criminal case over the riots at Manege Square was opened on December 17, 2010. The defendants are Belarusian citizen, an activist of the unregistered non-governmental organisation The Other Russia, member of the Strategy 31 movement Igor Berezyuk, two activists of The Other Russia Kirill Unchuk and Ruslan Khubayev, as well as Leonid Panin and Alexander Kozevin. All of them are in custody.

Berezyuk is charged with inciting mass disorders, hooliganism, inciting hatred or hostility, acts of violence against a government official and the involvement of an underage person in a crime. Hubayev, Unchuk, Panin and Kozevin are charged with making calls for rioting, vandalism and violence against a government official.

The riots took place in Moscow on December 11, 2010. They were caused by the situation surrounding the murder of a Spartak football club fan Yegor Sviridov during a scuffle with the natives of the North Caucasus, which occurred several days earlier. After that, up to 5,000 football fans and members of informal nationalist groups gathered at Manege Square as they were angered by actions of law enforcers who after initially detaining six suspects in the murder of Sviridov, later released five of them on recognizance. The unauthorized rally turned into a clash with security forces.

Criminal cases were opened on the facts of riots at Manege Square, as well as at the Metro stations Kitai Gorod, Tretyakovskaya, Tverskaya, Filevsky Park and others in connection with infliction of bodily harm, hooliganism and violence against law enforcement bodies.

The five defendants were arrested during the period from January to April this year.

“The criminal investigation against other rioters continues,” spokesman for the Russian Investigative Committee (SK) Vladimir Markin said earlier.

According to earlier reports, investigation into the December 11, 2010 riot on Moscow’s downtown Manezhnaya Square is over and its main person named in the criminal charges, Igor Berezyuk, does not recognize his guilt, the man’s lawyer Dmitry Agranovsky said. “My defendant and I signed a protocol on familiarization with the materials of the case,” he told Itar-Tass in late June. “Now these materials will be handed over to the Prosecutor’s Office where the public prosecutor is due to draft an act of indictment that will be then read out in the courtroom.”

Berezyuk is accused of encroachments on several articles of the Criminal Code at a time, including the appeals for public disorders. “As for the riot itself, my defendant doesn’t recognize any guilt on his part in this,” Agranovsky said, adding that Berezyuk refuses to give any evidence as regards the episode with the policeman. Upon the examination of CCTV materials at the beginning of January 2011, the investigators drew a conclusion that Berezyuk had hit an OMON riot police officer on Manezhnaya Square.

Actions of protest were sparked off in a number of Russian cities, including Moscow, by the killing of the 28-year-old football fan, Yegor Sviridov, in a night-time brawl on the outskirts of Moscow. He was killed from a non-lethal gun by a man hailing from North Caucasus.

In Moscow, about 5,000 football fans and nationalistically minded young people filled Manezhnaya Square in the afternoon December 11, chanting nationalistic slogans and provoking incidents with the use of brute force against the non-Slavic-looking passers-by. Clashes between the protesters and the police occurred and 35 persons turned up at hospitals with various injuries by the end of the day.

Manezhnaya Square is a large pedestrian open space at the heart of Moscow bound by the Hotel Moskva to the east, the State Historical Museum and the Alexander Garden to the south, the Moscow Manege to the west, and the 18th-century headquarters of the Moscow State University to the north.

The square forms a vital part of downtown Moscow, connecting Red Square (which sprawls behind the Iberian Gate immediately to the south) with a major traffic artery, Tverskaya Street, which starts here and runs northward in the direction of Saint Petersburg. It is served by three metro stations: Okhotny Ryad, Ploshchad Revolyutsii, and Teatralnaya.

During the 1990s, the Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov had the square closed to traffic and substantially renovated. The centrepiece of the renovated square is a modern trade centre, with four underground storeys and parking lot capped with a rotating glass cupola, which forms a world clock of the Northern hemisphere with major cities marked and a scheme of lights below each panel to show the progression of the hour. Another innovation is the feign river-bed of the Neglinnaya River, which has become a popular attraction for the Muscovites and tourists alike, especially on sultry days of summer. The river's course is imitated by a rivulet dotted with fountains and statues of Russian fairy-tale characters, as sculpted by Zurab Tsereteli. In 1995, Vyacheslav Klykov's equestrian statue of Marshal Zhukov was unveiled in front of the State Historical Museum to mark the 50th anniversary of the Moscow Victory Parade, when the Soviet commander had spectacularly rode a white stallion through Red Square and Manege Square.




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