Events in Russia




We invite you to participate in the agricultural conference "GrainRu'19" on current issues of the grain market in the south of Russia and the management of grain terminals as part of the logistics forum "River Transport of Russia" on November 7 in Rostov-on-Don. Речные перевозки России 2019, 7 ноября, Ростов-на-Дону

MOSCOW, September 8. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday morning came to a polling station in the Russian Academy of Sciences to cast his vote at the election to the Moscow City Duma.

Putin traditionally votes at this polling station number 2151. Previously, Putin cast his vote there at the presidential election in 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2018.

On September 8 - a single voting day, Russian citizens elect heads of federal subjects and members of legislatures, city mayors and members of city councils, as well as representative bodies, municipalities. Besides, by-elections to the State Duma (lower house of parliament) are held.

Moscow citizens will cast their votes for members of the Moscow City Duma. The elections to the city parliament are held in 45 single-seat constituencies, and three of them will have online voting. Some 7.3 mln voters are eligible to vote in Moscow. The polling stations opened at 8 a.m. and will close at 8 p.m.

BEIJING, September 8. /TASS/. Trade turnover between Russia and China in January-August 2019 grew 4.5% to $70.59 bln, China’s General Administration of Customs said on Sunday.

According to the data published by the agency, the volume of Chinese exports to Russia showed zero growth the first eight months of this year, estimated at nearly $31.14 bln. China’s imports of Russian goods and services increased 8.3% to $39.45 bln.
In July, trade turnover between the two countries reached $9.41 bln.

In 2016, Russian-Chinese trade rose 2.2%, reaching $69.52 bln. In 2017, this number grew 20.8% to $84.07 bln, and in 2018 it exceeded $107 bln, showing a 27.1% growth.

And there were supposed to be next record collections #pszenicy in Russia (over 80 million tons). Yields at last year's level, and Siberia is just starting to harvest. Was the USDA right to forecast only 73 million tons?
 
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Russia says Facebook, Google distributed political ads on election day
FILE PHOTO: Stickers bearing the Facebook logo are pictured at Facebook Inc's F8 developers conference in San Jose, California, U.S., April 30, 2019.  REUTERS/Stephen Lam

Russian state communications watchdog Roskomnadzor said tech giants Google and Facebook <FB.O> had allowed political advertising during Sunday's regional elections despite being asked to ban such publicity.

MP excoriates Facebook, Google for brazenly violating Russia’s electoral laws
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© EPA/FACUNDO ARRIZABALAGA

Earlier, the online resources were accused of meddling in Russia’s elections.

MOSCOW, September 9, 2019 - Silicon Valley tech giants, Google and Facebook flagrantly violated Russia’s electoral legislation by posting political advertisements of some candidates during the blackout period for campaigning and on election day on September 8 in Russia, First Deputy Head of the United Russia faction Andrei Isayev told reporters.

“Major information resources, such as Facebook and Google, have brazenly violated Russia’s electoral legislation by posting open appeals to vote for some candidates and lists during the pre-election silence period and even on election day,” said Isayev, who is also a member of the State Duma Commission on Investigating Foreign Interference in Russia’s Internal Affairs.

“We will certainly deal with this situation. We plan on summoning representatives of these organizations so that they appear at the commission’s proceedings on [Investigating Foreign Interference in Russia’s Internal Affairs.]

Earlier, the commission’s chair Vasily Piskarev said he and his colleagues would thoroughly analyze the facts indicating Google and Facebook had meddled in Russia’s elections, which were provided by the Central Election Commission and Russia’s telecom and media watchdog. In response to the accusations, Google said the company favored “responsible political advertising.” In its turn, Facebook said the advertisers were the ones responsible for complying with Russia’s electoral legislation.

Russians vote in local and regional elections after biggest protests in years
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny speaks with people outside a polling station during the Moscow city parliament election in Moscow, Russia September 8, 2019. REUTERS/Tatyana Makeyeva

Residents of Moscow voted on Sunday in one of the most closely watched local elections in years after the exclusion of many opposition candidates triggered the biggest protests in the Russian capital for nearly a decade.

Russia's ruling party loses a third of seats in Moscow election after protests
Russia's President Vladimir Putin casts his ballot at a polling station during the Moscow city parliament election in Moscow, Russia September 8, 2019. Sputnik/Alexei Nikolsky/Kremlin via REUTERS

Russia's ruling United Russia party, which supports President Vladimir Putin, has lost one third of its seats in the Moscow city assembly, final polling data cited by Russian news agencies showed on Monday, in an awkward setback for the Kremlin.

Results of election to Moscow’s legislature indicate lack of protest voting — Kremlin
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© Kirill Kukhmar/TASS

MOSCOW, September 9, 2019 - The results of Sunday’s elections to the Moscow City Duma (legislature) indicate that deliberations of political analysts about protest voting were not true, Russian president’s press secretary, Dmitry Peskov told journalists on Monday.

"We are not inclined to agree with that. On the contrary, the election results indicate that all the deliberations of political analysts about ‘protest voting’ have proved to be untrue," he said when asked whether the Kremlin saw any links between the fact that members of the ruling United Russia party have lost a number of seats in the Moscow City Duma after the September 8 elections and this summer’s street protests in Moscow.

Andrei Turchak, secretary of United Russia’s General Council, said earlier that the party’s faction was winning the majority in the Moscow City Duma and hoped to have 25 out of 45 seats. However, secretary of United Russia’s Moscow city branch Andrei Metelsky has ceded his Duma seat to Sergey Sevostyanov of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF).

Elections to the Moscow City Duma were held on the single voting day on September 8 in 45 one-seat constituencies. A total of 225 candidates were registered. Fifty-eight of them were self-nominees. The rest represented the CPRF, the Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR), A Just Russia party, Civilian Power, Yabloko, Communists of Russia, Rodina (Motherland), the Greens and the Party of Growth.

United Russia's performance nationwide
Commenting on the votes secured by the United Russia party across Russia, Peskov noted that the outcome of the single voting day provides a great opportunity for analysing the situation and drawing certain conclusions about the future.

Peskov stressed that the United Russia party "has won the overwhelming majority of seats and has lost some of them." "Certainly, each election provides a great opportunity for analyzing the situation and the ground for drawing certain conclusions. I’m sure that all parties, which took part in the polls, and all candidates will certainly use the experience gained during this election to prepare for the new ones," Peskov said.

Overall, the United Russia party has maintained its leading positions, the Kremlin spokesman said on Monday, adding that there have been no major incidents during the elections.

"We have to give an overall estimation of United Russia’s performance at the elections. In general, this election campaign all over Russia has been quite successful for the United Russia party," the spokesman told reporters. He noted that the party’s representatives "[will receive] more seats in some places, fewer seats in others, however, overall, the party has demonstrated its political leadership in the country."

"The elections have taken place without incident, in a working atmosphere. Of course, sociologists and political analysts will continue to discuss and attempt to analyze the results — it’s their bread and butter. However, we can only state the existing preliminary results that were announced by the Central Election Commission," Peskov said.

The election must be free and fair, he concluded, citing the motto of President Vladimir Putin and Central Election Commission’s Head Ella Pamfilova.

Peskov noted that it was absolutely wrong to draw any conclusions now, stressing that fluctuations of figures were quite possible. According to Peskov, systemic conclusions, summing up the entire picture, should be made.

Nationwide, over 5,000 elections of various levels took place on September 8 in 85 Russian regions. Thirteen regions elected their legislatures and 16 regions elected governors. City legislatures were elected in 22 administrative centers and three regional capitals elected heads of municipal entities. Apart from that, by-elections to the Russian State Duma lower parliament house were held in four one-seat constituencies.

According to Andrei Turchak, the United Russia has received over 60% of mandates in Russian regional legislative bodies without taking into account the self-nominees that may join the United Russia parliamentary fractions later.
 
Kremlin says alleged U.S. spy did not have access to Putin
September 10, 2019 - The Kremlin played down reports of a CIA spy inside Russia's presidential administration, but said an official identified by Russian media as the likely U.S. mole had worked there although he did not have access to President Vladimir Putin.

CNN reported on Monday that the United States had successfully extracted one of its highest-level covert sources inside Russia in 2017.

Russian daily newspaper Kommersant said on Tuesday the official may have been a man called Oleg Smolenkov, who is reported to have disappeared with his wife, Antonina, and three children while on holiday in Montenegro in June 2017.

Lavrov says he never met with alleged CIA spy Smolenkov
MOSCOW, September 10, 2019 - Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told reporters on Tuesday he had never met former staff member of the Russian presidential administration Oleg Smolenkov, whom media reports refer to as a possible CIA agent.

"I have never seen him, I have never met him, and I have neither kept track of his career nor his movements", Lavrov said, stressing that he could only comment on the facts.

Russia calls suggestion suspected CIA mole unmasked election meddling slander
FILE PHOTO - A view shows the St. Basil's Cathedral (L) and the Kremlin wall, before the lights were switched off for Earth Hour in Red Square in central Moscow, Russia, March 25, 2017. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

Russia condemned as lies and slander on Wednesday suggestions a suspected CIA mole in the presidential administration had handed over information to the United States about alleged Russian meddling in the U.S. presidential elections.

Russia slams allegation that suspected CIA mole unmasked Russian election meddling: Ifax
Russia's deputy foreign minister said on Wednesday that allegations a suspected CIA mole in the Kremlin handed over information about alleged Russian meddling in U.S. elections were lies and slander, the Interfax news agency reported.

Bulgarian NGO official charged with spying for Russia
FILE PHOTO: Russian President Vladimir Putin and Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov hug each other after a joint news conference following their talks at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia May 30, 2018. Pavel Golovkin/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

Bulgarian prosecutors charged the head of a non-governmental organization (NGO) on Tuesday with spying for Russia as part of a scheme they said aimed to draw Bulgaria away from its Western allies and towards Moscow.

Espionage probe not aimed against Russia, says Bulgarian PM
FILE PHOTO - Bulgaria's Prime Minister Boyko Borissov leaves a European Union leaders summit in Brussels, Belgium July 1, 2019. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir

A Bulgarian investigation into alleged espionage involving Russian non-governmental organizations is not intended to influence relations with Moscow, Prime Minister Boyko Borissov said on Wednesday.

Prosecutors charged the head of a Bulgarian non-governmental organization (NGO) on Tuesday with spying for Russia as part of a scheme they said aimed to draw Bulgaria away from its Western allies and towards Moscow.

Prosecutors said Nikolai Malinov, 50, head of the National Russophile Movement, had worked for the Russian Institute for Strategic Studies, run mainly by former foreign intelligence officials, and also for another Russian NGO, the Double-Headed Eagle, since 2010.

In his first public comments following the charges against Malinov, Borissov said his country had made its choice long ago and stands with the European Union and NATO.

Bulgaria, Moscow’s most loyal satellite in Soviet times, is now a member of NATO and the European Union but has close cultural and historic ties with Russia, which remains its biggest energy supplier

“Some are trying to put this on the same level with our relations with Russia ... I do not see any reason to link the one with the other,” Borissov said at a government meeting.

“Everyone, including non-governmental organizations, has the right to carry on with their activities ... some love Russia, some America, some Europe, but our geopolitical stance, backed by all political parties, is with the European Union and NATO,” he said.

At a special a hearing in parliament, Chief Prosecutor Sotir Tsatsarov said Bulgaria had banned the leader of Double-Headed Eagle organization, Konstantin Malofeev, from entering Bulgaria for 10 years.

He said 15 people, mainly linked with the National Russophile Movement were questioned as part of the investigation and eight were temporary detained.

The head of the state security agency, Dimitar Georgiev, told parliament that the heads of the two organizations identified in the case had publicly declared they were waging a hybrid war against the West.

The arrests prompted protests from the opposition Socialist party, which support closer ties with Russia and suggested that the probe could be linked with local elections on Oct. 27.

“We have nothing against people who love Russia ... but we, together with the services of our allies, work on specific people and processes,” Borisov said.

Anti-Kremlin candidate wins Moscow assembly seat with help of army votes: data
FILE PHOTO: Russian politician Sergei Mitrokhin attends a rally to demand authorities allow opposition candidates to run in the upcoming local election and release protesters, who were detained during recent demonstrations, in Moscow, Russia August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Tatyana Makeyeva

An anti-Kremlin opposition candidate has won a rare seat in Moscow's legislature with the help of some army votes, election data showed, suggesting that discontent over falling living standards may have reached parts of the military.
 
Putin will meet Bibi in Sochi to discuss the situation in Syria.

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11 SEP, 2019

By Prof Gilbert Achcar - September 11, 2019
 
The production of equipment for the metallurgical industry was restored on the basis of the ORMETO-UUMZ engineering concern in Orsk, Orenburg Region. A portfolio of orders worth 2 billion rubles has already been formed for the enterprise

Dmitry Medvedev signed a decree on conducting an experiment on marking bicycles in the country from September 16, 2019 to May 31, 2020, a source in the Cabinet of Ministers said: http://go.tass.ru/NKDj



12 Sep, 18:49
According to the minister, Russia does not plan to attract foreign loans anymore this year
MOSCOW, September 12. /TASS/. Russia does not plan to attract foreign loans anymore this year and in 2020 it will borrow in euros or yuan but not in dollars, First Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said on Thursday.

"We will borrow in currencies other than the dollar. This year we have no plans to borrow on foreign market anymore, we have fulfilled our program and even overfulfilled it. Next year we’ll see. Probably it will be not only in euros but maybe in Chinese yuans," Siluanov said.

In March, the Finance Ministry issued Eurobonds worth $3 bln with the maturity date in March 2035 and additionally issued Eurobonds worth 750 mln euros with the maturity date in 2025. In June, the Finance Ministry placed additional Eurobonds worth $1.5 bln with the maturity date in 2029 and worth $1 bln with the maturity date in 2035.


Bloomberg (USA): Russia's gold reserve today exceeds $ 100 billion http://bit.ly/34uqikl© AP Photo, Mike Groll
 
In the last two weeks, I have noticed an uptick "in Russian and Putin bashing" in U.S. media outlets. It basically centered around the Russian election with a claim of a CIA mole in the Kremlin. (Oh NO! Sorcha Faal's - cover has been blown?)

Anyways, the fifth-column must be getting really desperate - when they start featuring old hit-pieces on Yahoo's front page news, suggesting there is tension between Russia and China, two very close allies.


Russia Is Angry That China Stole and Copied Its Jet Fighter Designs (Sept. 13, 2019)

Russia Is Angry That China Stole and Copied Its Jet Fighter Designs (September 2018)

Michael Peck is a contributing writer for the National Interest. He can be found on Twitter and Facebook. This first appeared in September 2018.

8befc777529ab7d80d76f0ec25d250d4

Key point: China has often stolen foreign military technology but there are risks to doing so.

Remember that Russian carrier-based jet that China copied without permission? Those airplanes are crashing, and Russia doesn't seem too broken up about it.

Though Russia and China are now friends, even holding joint exercises, Russia's Sputnik News recently trotted out an article titled "Chinese Navy Short on Carrier-Based Fighters, Only Has Problem-Ridden J-15."

The J-15 is an unlicensed copy of Russia's Su-33 carrier jet, which is a 1980s derivative of the Su-27K land-based fighter. China had acquired a T-10K-3, an Su-33 prototype, from Ukraine and then reverse-engineered it.

With a barely disguised touch of schadenfreude, Sputnik News delved into the woes of the J-15. "Love for the fourth-generation J-15 jet is seldom shown in Chinese circles," said the Russian news site. "The Asia Times noted that Chinese media has disparaged the plane in numerous ways, including referring to it as a 'flopping fish' for its inability to operate effectively from the Chinese carriers, which launch fixed-wing aircraft under their own power from an inclined ramp on the bow of the ship. The J-15's engines and heavy weight severely limit its ability to operate effectively: at 17.5 tons empty weight, it tops the scales for carrier-based fighters. The US Navy's F-18 workhorse, by comparison, is only 14.5 tons."

Many shoppers on eBay and Amazon can attest to what happens when you buy "unlicensed" products, though one can ask how many of these problems began with the original Russian design. In any event, so many J-15s have crashed and burned that China is developing a new carrier jet, the J-31.

After dissecting the J-15's flaws, Sputnik News then trotted out Russian military expert Vasily Kashin, who proceeded to explain why you shouldn't copy other nation's aircraft without permission.

"Years ago the Chinese decided to save some money and, instead of buying several Su-33s from Russia for their subsequent license production in China, they opted for a Su-33 prototype in Ukraine," Kashin said.

"The development of the J-15 took more time and more money than expected, and the first planes proved less than reliable," said Kashin. "By spending some more time and money, the Chinese will apparently solve the problems they now have and will get a fairly reliable and powerful carrier-based fighter."

At this point, it is worth noting that the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia also had a habit of "acquiring" Western technology without the consent of the owners, for everything from the atomic bomb, to the Space Shuttle and video games. It's actually a dubious accomplishment, an admission that a nation lacks the capacity to really innovate its own technology.

Considering that China has the same habit, there is a poetic justice here.


Russia blasts idea a CIA mole lifted lid on its U.S. meddling
FILE PHOTO - A view shows the St. Basil's Cathedral (L) and the Kremlin wall, before the lights were switched off for Earth Hour in Red Square in central Moscow, Russia, March 25, 2017. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

Russia on Wednesday condemned as lies and slander suggestions a suspected CIA mole in President Vladimir Putin's administration had handed over information to the United States about alleged Russian meddling in the U.S. presidential elections.

Moscow asks U.S. to confirm location of ex-official named as possible spy
Russia has asked the United States via Interpol to confirm the whereabouts of a former Kremlin official who Russian media have said may have been a U.S. spy exfiltrated in 2017, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Thursday.

Russia fired officials who let alleged CIA mole flee country - Ifax
Russia fired officials who allowed a former Kremlin employee and alleged CIA informant to flee the country, the Interfax news agency reported on Friday.

Russia carries out mass raids on Kremlin critic Navalny's supporters
A still image taken from a video footage shows a masked law enforcement officer addressing journalists during a raid in a local office of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny in Perm, Russia September 12, 2019. 59.RU/Handout via REUTERS TV

Russian law enforcement authorities on Thursday carried out mass raids on the homes and offices of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny's supporters across the country, a move he described as the biggest crackdown of its kind in modern Russian history.

Prague to remove statue of Soviet marshal who led Red Army forces
A bird flies past the monument of Soviet World War II commander Ivan Stepanovic Konev in Prague, Czech Republic, September 12, 2019.  REUTERS/David W Cerny

A district assembly in Prague voted on Thursday to remove a statue of a Soviet World War Two marshal and replace it with a more general memorial following a row that has drawn in the Czech president and Russian authorities.
 

Published: Sept 13, 2019 1:48 p.m. ET
MW-HR288_gold_r_20190913133014_ZH.jpg

Russian central bank gold reserves stand at 2,219.2 metric tons, according to the World Gold Council

Emerging markets have beefed up gold holdings, undeterred by prices near their highest levels in more than six years, as countries such as Russia and China diversify their foreign-exchange reserves—a trend that is likely to continue.

“Central bank buying is, of course, important to the supply/demand dynamic for the metal, but is much more important in terms of sentiment toward the metal,” says Brien Lundin, editor of Gold Newsletter. When central banks are “buying as heavily as they are, it provides cover and a rationale for other central banks to do the same.”

Russian central bank gold reserves stand at 2,219.2 metric tons, according to the World Gold Council, or WGC, based on the latest data available in September from sources including the International Monetary Fund. China’s holdings are at 1,936.5 metric tons.

Given the latest prices, with the most-active gold futures contract GCZ19, +0.57% settling at $1,499.50 an ounce on Friday, and about 32,151 troy ounces in one metric ton, the value of Russia’s gold reserves is at roughly $107 billion.

The moves are due to concerns about the outlook for currencies, including the dollar and the euro, says Mark O’Byrne, research director at GoldCore in Dublin. “While the gold tonnage demand from central banks in recent months has been significant and near records, gold remains a tiny fraction of most central banks’...foreign-exchange reserves,” he says, adding that the trend is “sustainable and indeed may accelerate.”

O’Byrne added that the risk of the trade war descending into a currency war may also be feeding central bank diversification into gold.

Central banks had a record first half of the year, collectively buying 374 metric tons of gold through June, says Juan Carlos Artigas, director of investment research at the WGC. That was the highest first half of the year since central banks became net buyers in 2010. Net purchases from central banks year to date are still below those of 2018, but with the significant level of central bank purchases this year, “we will likely be above the 10-year average,” says Artigas.

The price of gold, which has climbed to six-year highs on and off since June, hasn’t hurt that appetite for the precious metal. Gold futures settled at $1,560.40 on Sept. 4, the highest finish since April 2013.

“Price is not the determining factor in central bank buying—rather, [the banks] are more likely being guided to secure an allocation of a percentage of their overall foreign-exchange reserves in gold bullion,” says O’Byrne. The central bank diversification and hedging are likely to support gold at these levels and could be a driver of higher prices in the coming months, he says.

The WGC reported that gold holdings in Russia represent 19.6% of its total foreign reserves, while gold holdings are a mere 2.8% share of China’s total foreign reserves. “China and Russia are obviously intent on insulating themselves from a dollarized global economy, and gold seems to be a very important part of that strategy,” Lundin says. “While gold still represents a relatively small portion of China’s total foreign reserves...[the Chinese] seem to feel that gold will become more valuable over time, while the dollar will become less so.”

The rush of central bank gold buying doesn’t say much about where near-term prices of gold are headed, but it does say “a lot about where it’s going over the long term, or at least where the banks believe it’s going,” Lundin says.
 
There was Blast & fire hits major virus lab in Russia, where HIV, Ebola & anthrax strains are stored -- Sott.net It is not said if anyone was hurt. Was this a complete accident? It seems to be a probable strategic target also, thus sabotage can not be ruled out.
Perhaps Russia also accepts its own part of the "compromises" because in: Report: Russia recently prevented Israeli airstrikes targeting Syria, and Putin warned Netanyahu against attacking Lebanon -- Sott.net there was:
Israeli sources called Netanyahu's quick Russian visit - to try and convince Putin to ignore Israel's attacks in Syria - "a failure."
and to the article there was this comment:
So the "compromise" that Israel is being asked for is to limit, not stop, its bombing of Syria. And the real compromise that Syria (and Lebanon and Iran) are being asked for is to allow some of that bombing to take place. Meanwhile, Russia is quietly creating certain 'facts on the ground' - militarily and politically, with a view to achieving its broader aim of a peace and stability in the region that has not been seen for, arguably, over 100 years.
 
Russia’s ruble rallied, bucking declines in emerging markets, and shares of the nation’s largest oil company surged, after a strike on a Saudi Arabian refinery boosted the outlook for other producers.

The ruble climbed 0.9% to 63.7425 per dollar, headed for its strongest level since July. Shares of Rosneft PJSC surged 3.6% to 424.80 rubles, the most since February, as Citigroup said the company’s production flexibility means it’s “best-positioned” to benefit from the Saudi outage.

The ruble joined a rally in currencies of other commodity-linked nations, including the Norwegian krone and the Canadian dollar, as the attack on the world’s largest crude exporter sent Brent crude soaring 11%.

Russia’s currency will get a lift because every extra $1 on the oil price translates into an additional $7.5 million of export revenue each day, with about 75% of that going into the budget, according to Chris Weafer, a senior partner at Macro Advisory Ltd. in Moscow.

“Our short-term tactical model highlights that there is more upside, if oil holds at current levels,” VTB Capital strategists including Maxim Korovin, wrote. “Middle East geopolitical premium is back on the table.”




 
Russia’s FSB carries out massive operation against Jehovah’s Witnesses in Crimea
The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) has carried out dozens of searches against members of the religious organization Jehovah's Witnesses, which is outlawed in Russia, in Crimea’s city of Dzankoy, the TV channel Rossiya-24 reported on Friday.

The sect’s leader, Sergei Filatov, was detained overnight into November 16. Extremist literature and booklets describing ways to recruit people were found in his flat. A criminal case was launched against him under Article 282 of the Russian Criminal Code ("Extremism"), the TV channel reported.

Jehovah’s Witnesses members in Dzhankoy are also suspected of collusion with Ukrainian intelligence services. According to the report, this sect was managed from Kharkov.

Russia widens Jehovah's Witnesses crackdown with new jailings
FILE PHOTO: Dennis Christensen, a Jehovah's Witness accused of extremism, leaves after a court session in handcuffs in the town of Oryol, Russia January 14, 2019. REUTERS/Andrew Osborn/File Photo

FILE PHOTO: Dennis Christensen, a Jehovah's Witness accused of extremism, leaves after a court session in handcuffs in the town of Oryol, Russia January 14, 2019. REUTERS/Andrew Osborn/File Photo

Russia has widened a crackdown against Jehovah's Witnesses, jailing six adherents of the Christian denomination for extremism in a move rights activists said was unjust and flouted religious freedom.

A regional court in Saratov jailed six Jehovah’s Witnesses on Thursday for up to three-and-a-half years, a court spokeswoman said on Friday.

“Yes they were convicted,” the spokeswoman, Olga Pirueva, said. “Punishments ranged from three years and six months down to two years (in jail).”

The court found the six men guilty of continuing the activities of an extremist organization, a reference to a 2017 ruling from Russia’s Supreme Court which found the group to be an “extremist” organization and ordered it to disband.

The U.S.-headquartered Jehovah’s Witnesses have been under pressure for years in Russia, where the dominant Orthodox Church is championed by President Vladimir Putin. Orthodox scholars have cast them as a dangerous foreign sect that erodes state institutions and traditional values, allegations they reject.

The latest jailings follow the conviction in February of a Danish builder in Russia for his association with Jehovah’s Witnesses. Dennis Christensen was found guilty of organizing an extremist group and jailed for six years.

Over 250 Jehovah’s Witnesses in Russia are facing criminal charges, according to the group, with 41 in detention and 23 under house arrest.

"Speculative Thesis"
Under Thursday’s ruling, Konstantin Bazhenov and Alexei Budenchuk were sentenced to three-and-a-half years in jail, Felix Makhammadiev to three years, and Roman Gridasov, Gennady German, and Alexei Miretsky to two years in prison each.

The court also banned them from holding leadership positions in public organizations for five years.

Jehovah’s Witnesses say Russia’s constitution guarantees their adherents’ right to exercise freedom of religion and deny wrongdoing.

“The whole logic of the accusation was based on the speculative thesis that faith in God is ‘a continuation of the activities of an extremist organization’,” Jarrod Lopes, a U.S.-based spokesman for the group, said in a statement.

“Instead of searching and proving the guilt of the defendants, the aim of the investigation was to prove their religious affiliation, despite the fact that no religion is prohibited in Russia.”

Lawyers for the men plan to appeal what they regard as absurd convictions, said Lopes.

With about 170,000 followers in Russia and 8 million worldwide, Jehovah’s Witnesses are a Christian denomination known for door-to-door preaching, close Bible study, and rejection of military service and blood transfusions.

They believe the end of the world as we know it is imminent, an event “the obedient” will survive to inhabit the Kingdom of God they believe will follow.

Rachel Denber of U.S.-based Human Rights Watch condemned the court’s ruling, saying the men had been jailed for nothing. “They should be freed,” Denber said on social media.

Russian shaman who vowed to banish Putin taken in for psychiatric tests
A Siberian shaman detained by police while trekking to Moscow on what he said was a mission to drive President Vladimir Putin out of the Kremlin has been taken into a psychiatric hospital for evaluation, a regional health ministry said on Friday.

Alexander Gabyshev became a media curiosity when he set off in March on a more than 8,000 kilometer (4,970 miles) walk to Moscow, a journey he said would culminate with him banishing Russia’s leader whom he described as a demon.

His odyssey was abruptly cut short on Thursday after nearly 3,000 kilometers however when police in Buryatia detained him on a highway in Siberia over an unspecified crime in his native region of Yakutia.

Yakutia’s health ministry said in a statement on Friday that Gabyshev had been taken to a psychiatric hospital where medical specialists planned to evaluate his mental health.

“If pathologies are identified with the patient in question, then we are ready to provide qualified medical help,” it said.

Amnesty International has condemned his detention, saying that “the shaman’s actions may be eccentric, but the Russian authorities’ response is grotesque.”

Shamanism, a belief that it is possible to communicate with and harness the energy of what practitioners perceive to be the spirit world, is practiced in various parts of Russia.
 




The construction of a universal landing ship is planned at the Zaliv shipyard
SIMFEROPOL, September 23. / TASS /. The authorities of the Republic of Crimea confirmed the preparation of the Zaliv shipyard in Kerch for hosting the project for the construction of a universal landing ship (UDC) - a helicopter carrier, Deputy Minister of Industrial Policy of the Republic Elena Elekchyan told TASS.

In September, two sources in the shipbuilding industry told TASS that the first two UDCs would be laid for the first time in Russian history at the Zaliv plant in Crimea in May 2020, there was no official confirmation of this information.

“The issue of designing and deploying a universal landing ship project at the Zaliv shipyard is currently being worked out,” said Elekchyan, answering the question whether the possibility of building a UDC at the Zaliv plant is being considered. Elekchyan did not provide details.

Earlier, another source in the shipbuilding industry told TASS that no later than the end of 2019, the Ministry of Defense would complete the formation of a tactical and technical task for the first Russian universal landing ships. According to him, it is planned to build and hand over the head UDC to the customer as part of the GPV-2027 (state weapons program), and the serial one - until the early 2030s.

Zaliv Yard is one of the largest industrial enterprises in the Republic of Crimea. It has been operating in the shipbuilding and ship repair market since 1938. The plant’s production facilities include a dry dock and hull workshops, which allow for the construction of large vessels. It has a slipway for building ships up to 300 m long and up to 50 m wide, which makes it possible to lay ships with a displacement of more than 150 thousand tons.

Universal landing ships, also called helicopter carriers, are capable of carrying a large group of heavy helicopters for various purposes (up to 16 helicopters from Mistral and more than 30 from American type Wasp), and also carry from several hundred to a thousand or more marine corps. UDC have a dock for boats and other watercraft to ensure landing, transport armored vehicles.

Sergei Frank will step down as president and chief executive of Russian state-controlled shipping giant Sovcomflot after 15 years at the helm, four sources familiar with the decision told Reuters on Tuesday.

Frank will give up operational control of Sovcomflot and take over as chairman of the company’s board, two of the sources said.

It was not immediately clear why Frank, 59, was moving position. A Sovcomflot spokesman referred requests for comment to the company’s controlling shareholder, the government.

A government spokesman said the state would issue information on a new board of directors “in the near future”.

In a government order published on Monday, Frank was named as a board member – not the director general – in the list of candidates to be on Sovcomflot’s board of directors, indirectly confirming his move from CEO.

Frank’s deputy, Igor Tonkovidov, is set to become the new CEO, sources said.

Frank has been at the helm of Sovcomflot, following a merger of several shipping companies in the late days of the Soviet Union, since October 2004.

In 1990s he worked in the Russian transportation ministry, which he headed from 1998-2004 before moving to Sovcomflot.

The government has considered a listing of Sovcomflot for years as part of broader privatisation plans, but obstacles ranging from weak markets to international sanctions placed on Russia over its role in Ukraine’s crisis have prevented an IPO.
(Reporting by Gleb Stolyarov and Darya Korsunskaya; Writing by Vladimir Soldatkin; Editing by Katya Golubkova and Mark Potter)
 
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'Trump is busy with 'withdrawing from Syria' and for the other guy - I don't know him.' :-)

8 OCT, 2019

08.10.2019
 

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