Year: 2019

  • Miratorg increased feedstuff production by 4.7% to 1.53 million tons in 2018

    Miratorg increased feedstuff production by 4.7% to 1.53 million tons in 2018 Belgorod, January 29 – «Miratorg», the largest vertically integrated agricultural holding in Russia, reports increase in feedstuff production by 4.7% to 1.53 million tons in 2018 year on year. The company has already invested over 7.6 billion rubles to build from the scratch…

  • Majority of Russians Believe There Is a Threat of War – Poll

    Majority of Russians Believe There Is a Threat of War – Poll

    A majority of Russians say they believe that a war could break out between Russia and other countries, according to a poll published Wednesday by the independent Levada Center. The fear of war among Russians has gradually subsided after the 2014 annexation of the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine, when it peaked at 68 percent in…

  • Maduro Tells Russian Media He Is Ready for Talks With Opposition

    Maduro Tells Russian Media He Is Ready for Talks With Opposition

    Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said on Wednesday he was ready to sit down for talks with the country’s opposition and open to the possibility of third countries mediating, Russia’s RIA news agency reported. RIA released his comments as the struggle for control of Venezuela intensified with the government preparing an investigation that could lead to…

  • Arrival of Russian Passenger Jet Fires Up Venezuela’s Rumor Mill

    Arrival of Russian Passenger Jet Fires Up Venezuela’s Rumor Mill

    The unusual arrival of a Russian passenger plane in Caracas has set social media abuzz with rumors about its mission after the Kremlin pledged to support its ally Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro against a U.S.-backed effort to drive him from office. The Boeing 777, with space for some 400 passengers and belonging to Russia’s Nordwind…

  • Crack Found in Another Russian Spacecraft, Reports Say

    Crack Found in Another Russian Spacecraft, Reports Say

    A crack has reportedly been uncovered on a Russian rocket during pre-launch preparations, a second defect in less than a year. The U.S. microsatellite startup OneWeb was scheduled to send its first satellite into orbit on a Russian launch vehicle on Feb. 19 as it arrived in French Guiana last week. It was the second hole…

  • Former Russian Chess World Champion Vladimir Kramnik Retires

    Former Russian Chess World Champion Vladimir Kramnik Retires

    Russian chess grandmaster Vladimir Kramnik, regarded as one of the strongest players in the world, announced on Tuesday he was retiring from professional competition. Kramnik, 43, made waves in 2000 when he defeated defending champion Garry Kasparov at the World Championship. Currently ranked seventh by the World Chess Federation, he became the undisputed world champion…

  • Russia Ties Lebanon in 2018 Corruption Perceptions Index — Transparency International

    Russia Ties Lebanon in 2018 Corruption Perceptions Index — Transparency International

    Russia has dropped further in an annual corruption index compiled by the Transparency International watchdog for 2018, tying with countries like Lebanon, Mexico and Papua New Guinea. Russia had consistently ranked in the bottom half of the global civil society group’s annual corruption perceptions index. Federal prosecutors said they cracked down on $27 million worth…

  • PhosAgro Delegation Headed by CEO Andrey Guryev Takes Part in Opening Ceremony at UNESCO Headquarters to Launch International Year of the Periodic Table

    PhosAgro Delegation Headed by CEO Andrey Guryev Takes Part in Opening Ceremony at UNESCO Headquarters to Launch International Year of the Periodic Table

    Paris, France – Andrey Guryev, member of the Commission of the Russian Federation for UNESCO and CEO of PhosAgro, one of the world’s leading producers of phosphate-based fertilizers, took part in the official opening ceremony of the International Year of the Periodic Table held today at UNESCO headquarters in Paris, which took place with PhosAgro’s support.…

  • Russian Teacher Forces Late Students to Wear Gas Masks as Punishment, Sparking Probe

    Russian Teacher Forces Late Students to Wear Gas Masks as Punishment, Sparking Probe

    A school in Far East Russia is being investigated after a teacher reportedly punished students for being tardy by forcing them to sit through the rest of class in gas masks. Parents complained that a health and safety teacher made their seventh-graders wear gas masks for being late, a children’s rights official in the republic…

  • Alexander Suvorov

    Alexander Suvorov

    Alexander Vasilievich Suvorov was born on November 13 (24), 1729/30 in Moscow, in the family of the Ensign of the Life Guards of the Preobrazhensky Regiment Vasily Ivanovich Suvorov. His grandfather, Ivan Grigorievich, was the general clerk of the Preobrazhensky order, who was in charge of political investigations. Suvorov’s father, Vasili Ivanovich Suvorov (1708-1775), started…

  • Russian Finance Ministry Says Venezuela Must Repay Its Debt to Moscow on Time

    Russian Finance Ministry Says Venezuela Must Repay Its Debt to Moscow on Time

    Russia expects Venezuela will probably have problems servicing its sovereign debt to Moscow, Russia’s Deputy Finance Minister said on Tuesday, after Washington imposed sweeping sanctions on Venezuela’s state oil firm in a move the Kremlin called illegal. The Trump administration on Monday imposed restrictions on the PDVSA oil company, aimed at curbing the OPEC member’s crude exports…

  • Russian Town Installs Giant Fans to Disperse Smog

    Russian Town Installs Giant Fans to Disperse Smog

    Local officials have installed giant fans to chase away air pollution in a Russian mining town that has been plagued by toxic air for months. Smog first engulfed the town of Sibai in November after suspected emissions from an abandoned copper mine, sparking protests. Local authorities began to issue medical masks and activated charcoal to…

  • Kremlin Considers U.S. Sanctions on Venezuela Illegal Interference

    Kremlin Considers U.S. Sanctions on Venezuela Illegal Interference

    The Kremlin said on Tuesday that U.S. sanctions on Venezuela’s state oil company amounted to illegal and open interference in the Latin American country’s domestic affairs. Moscow is assessing the impact of the sanctions on Russia and intends to use all legal mechanisms at its disposable to protect Russia’s interests in Venezuela in light of…

  • Top Russian Executive Fired Over Sexually Explicit Gaming Stream – Reports

    Top Russian Executive Fired Over Sexually Explicit Gaming Stream – Reports

    A senior state corporation manager has been fired after boasting about his sexual relations with junior employees during a gaming stream leaked online, Russian media reported Tuesday. A Twitch livestreaming platform video appeared on Monday purporting to show Ruslan Gorring, the deputy head of a state mineral exploration corporation, cursing out other players. The nearly…

  • Enter the Curious World of Viktor Pivovarov

    Enter the Curious World of Viktor Pivovarov

    This is the last week to see Viktor Pivovarov’s exhibition “Moscow Album” at The Multimedia Art Museum. Pivovarov, alongside pioneering artists such as Ilya Kabakov and Erik Bulatov, was one of the leaders of the Moscow conceptualist movement in the 1970s and 1980s. A conceptualist is made Pivovarov, who turned 82 this month, was born…

  • Russia Expects Venezuela Will Struggle to Remunerate Moscow

    Russia Expects Venezuela Will Struggle to Remunerate Moscow

    Russia expects Venezuela will probably have problems servicing its sovereign debt to Moscow, Russia’s Deputy Finance Minister said on Tuesday, after Washington imposed sweeping sanctions on Venezuela’s state oil firm in a move the Kremlin called illegal. The Trump administration on Monday imposed restrictions on the PDVSA oil company, aimed at curbing the OPEC member’s crude exports…

  • Russian Art Thief Confesses to Stealing Painting to Settle Debts — Reports

    Russian Art Thief Confesses to Stealing Painting to Settle Debts — Reports

    The suspect in one of the most brazen art heists in recent history has confessed to having stolen prominent artist Arkhip Kuindzhi’s painting over the weekend to pay for his debts, Russian media have reported. Kuindzhi’s 1908 “Ai Petri, Crimea” was briefly stolen from Moscow’s Tretyakov Gallery on Sunday before police recovered it in a…

  • Billionaires in Moscow Try Building Dynasties for Post-Putin Era 

    Billionaires in Moscow Try Building Dynasties for Post-Putin Era 

    Russia last saw major fortunes change hands via inheritance more than a century ago. Roman and Arkady Abramovich Nick Potts / FA Bobo / PIXSELL / PA Images With Vladimir Putin now in his last consecutive presidential term, post-communist Russia’s first generation of billionaires is starting to test his commitment to private property by giving…

  • Russia Moves to Decriminalize ‘Unavoidable’ Corruption, Following Putin’s Proposal

    Russia Moves to Decriminalize ‘Unavoidable’ Corruption, Following Putin’s Proposal

    Russia’s Justice Ministry has proposed exempting officials in “exceptional circumstances” from anti-corruption regulations in new draft legislation, following a plan set by Russian President Vladimir Putin last year. Russia ranks among the world’s most corrupt countries, with Transparency International’s annual corruption perceptions index ranking it in 138th place this year out of 180 countries. Read More Putin…

  • Russia’s Health Ministry Wants to Import Marijuana for Research

    Russia’s Health Ministry Wants to Import Marijuana for Research

    Russia’s health ministry has said that it wants to legalize the import of hashish and marijuana for research purposes, according to a recently published draft bill. Russia bans the circulation of drugs, including marijuana and other cannabinoids whose use is legalized in certain U.S. states and European countries. Hashish contains higher concentrations of the psychotropic…

  • Western Intelligence Accused of Preparing for Russia’s Breakup

    Western Intelligence Accused of Preparing for Russia’s Breakup

    A top Russian official has accused Western intelligence agencies of preparing for the possibility of civil war and the breakup of the country into separate regions. In 2017, U.S.-funded media reported on a movie about a Siberian secessionist movement spearheaded by billionaire philanthropist George Soros and the State Department. Soros and the U.S. are routinely…

  • To Mourn or Celebrate? St. Petersburg Divided Over Anniversary of Leningrad Siege

    To Mourn or Celebrate? St. Petersburg Divided Over Anniversary of Leningrad Siege

    Seventy-five years after the Leningrad siege ended, the city’s residents won’t be told how to remember. Daniel Kozin / MT There are no individual graves at the Piskaryovskoye Cemetery in northern St. Petersburg. So, the crowds of mourners who brought wreaths threw them in one big pile at the feet of “The Motherland,” a towering…

  • A Daring Theft in a Moscow Museum

    A Daring Theft in a Moscow Museum

    When the news broke Sunday night of the theft of a painting at Moscow’s Tretyakov Gallery, it first seemed like a low-tech version of the “The Thomas Crown Affair.”  At 6 p.m. on Sunday, in the very popular show of works by 19th-century landscape painter Arkhip Kuindzhi — that is, one of the busiest times…

  • Moscow Hit by Freak Snowstorm, in Photos

    Moscow Hit by Freak Snowstorm, in Photos

    Alexander Avilov / Moskva News Agency Moscow was hit with its heaviest snowfall in nearly 70 years over the weekend, Russian media reported. While snow piled up on the pavements and snowplows hit the streets, many Muscovites rejoiced. The snowstorm started on Saturday morning and continued uninterrupted for some 37 hours, the weather news website Meteonovosti reported. …

  • Gazprom and OMV discuss relevant cooperation issues

    Gazprom and OMV discuss relevant cooperation issues

    Background OMV AG is Gazprom’s main partner in Austria. The companies cooperate in gas production, transportation and supplies. Since 2017, OMV has been partnering with Gazprom in the Yuzhno-Russkoye oil, gas and condensate field development. In June 2018, an Agreement was signed to extend until 2040 the existing contract between Gazprom Export and OMV Gas Marketing & Trading GmbH for Russian gas supplies to Austria. In November 2018, an Amendment to the contract on gas supplies to Austria…

  • The Kremlin Denies Sending Russian Mercenaries to Venezuela

    The Kremlin Denies Sending Russian Mercenaries to Venezuela

    The Kremlin has denied reports that private military contractors who carry out secret missions for Russia flew into Venezuela to reinforce security for its leader in the face of mass protests. Global superpowers split into two camps last week after the United States, Europe and Latin American allies backed opposition leader Juan Guaido declaring himself…

  • St. Petersburg Named Russia’s Most LGBT-Friendly City

    St. Petersburg Named Russia’s Most LGBT-Friendly City

    Russia’s cultural capital, St. Petersburg, has also distinguished itself as most tolerant of the LGBT community, according to the results of a recent survey. Russia banned “homosexual propaganda” among minors in 2013, leading the courts to ban gay pride events and public polling show surging anti-LGBT sentiment. In recent weeks, authorities in the North Caucasus…

  • ROSATOM Starts Testing of Accident Tolerant Fuels for Light Water Reactors

    First Russian-made experimental nuclear fuel assemblies based on accident-tolerant fuel (ATF) have been loaded for testing into the water loops of MIR research reactor at the State Research Institute of Atomic Reactors in Dimitrovgrad, Ulyanovsk Region. This work is a part of the project of TVEL Fuel Company of ROSATOM to develop Russian accident tolerant…

  • Russian Official Fired for Forcing Teachers to Clear Snow in Freezing Weather

    Russian Official Fired for Forcing Teachers to Clear Snow in Freezing Weather

    A public official has been dismissed following reports that she had forced teachers to remove snow in freezing weather, authorities in the Saratov region southeast of Moscow said Monday. Reports and footage of women identified as Saratov school teachers shoveling snow into wicker bags sparked outrage across Russia over the weekend. Heavy snowfall and slow…

  • U.S. Lifts Sanctions on Rusal, Other Firms Linked to Oligarch Deripaska

    U.S. Lifts Sanctions on Rusal, Other Firms Linked to Oligarch Deripaska

    U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration on Sunday lifted sanctions on aluminum giant Rusal and other Russian firms linked to oligarch Oleg Deripaska, defying a Democratic-led push in the U.S. Congress to maintain the restrictions. Earlier this month, 11 of Trump’s fellow Republicans in the U.S. Senate joined Democrats in a failed effort to keep the…

  • Russian Police Turn Up Painting Stolen From Moscow’s Tretyakov Gallery

    Russian Police Turn Up Painting Stolen From Moscow’s Tretyakov Gallery

    Russian police have recovered a painting by prominent artist Arkhip Kuindzhi stolen from a Moscow gallery on Sunday and detained the suspected thief, TASS state news agency said on Monday, citing a police official. A 31-year-old man told police where he had hidden the painting, TASS quoted a spokeswoman for the Russian Internal Ministry, Irina Volk,…

  • Tanks and Flowers: St. Petersburg Celebrates End of Leningrad Siege (in Photos)

    Tanks and Flowers: St. Petersburg Celebrates End of Leningrad Siege (in Photos)

    St. Petersburg marked the 75th anniversary of the lifting of the Siege of Leningrad this weekend with a military parade in the center of the city and commemorations of the fallen. The World War II-era siege, which lasted for 872 days and killed an estimated one million people, is remembered every year on Jan. 27 —…

  • 77% of Russians Oppose Ceding Kuril Islands to Japan, Poll Says

    77% of Russians Oppose Ceding Kuril Islands to Japan, Poll Says

    Over three-quarters of Russians have said they oppose handing a chain of Pacific islands to Japan as the countries seek to resolve a long-standing territorial row, according to a state-funded poll released on Monday. Tokyo has been seeking the return of the Kuril Islands — known in Japan as the Northern Territories — since Soviet…

  • Russian Mercenaries Arrive in Venezuela to Shore Up Maduro’s Rule

    Russian Mercenaries Arrive in Venezuela to Shore Up Maduro’s Rule

    Private military contractors who do secret missions for Russia flew into Venezuela in the past few days to beef up security for President Nicolas Maduro in the face of U.S.-backed opposition protests, according to two people close to them. A third source close to the Russian contractors also told Reuters there was a contingent of them in Venezuela,…

  • David Burliuk Comes Back to Moscow

    David Burliuk Comes Back to Moscow

    Last weeked to discover the most famous Russian art you’ve never seen “Woman With a Mirror” (1915-16) by David Burliuk Courtesy of Museum of Russian Impressionism Even if you don’t know the avant-garde poet and artist David Burliuk, you’d probably recognize his image instantly: a stocky man in a frock coat and top hat, with…

  • Russia Asks U.S. to Drop Plans to Deploy Missiles in Space

    Russia Asks U.S. to Drop Plans to Deploy Missiles in Space

    The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday called on the United States to drop what it called irresponsible plans to deploy a missile defense system in space, saying the move risked fueling an arms race. The ministry said in a statement that the plans looked like an attempt to resurrect the so-called Star Wars…

  • New Film Fest Opens at Cosmos Theater

    New Film Fest Opens at Cosmos Theater

    Iskusstvo Kino magazine (“The Art of Film”) and the Moskino chain of cinema theaters have teamed up to arrange a new festival, which started on January 24 and will go on till the end of the month. Its purpose is to show independent films to people who might not see them otherwise.  Anton Dolin, chief…

  • First Victim of Russia’s ‘Undesirable Organizations’ Law Declared Prisoner of Conscience

    First Victim of Russia’s ‘Undesirable Organizations’ Law Declared Prisoner of Conscience

    Amnesty International has declared the first activist to be prosecuted under Russia’s law against “undesirable organizations” a prisoner of conscience on Friday. A law passed in 2015 allows prosecutors to limit or halt the work of foreign organizations deemed “undesirable,” punishing those breaking these limits with fines or prison terms lasting up to six years.…

  • Russia Volunteers to Mediate Between Government and Opposition in Venezuela

    Russia Volunteers to Mediate Between Government and Opposition in Venezuela

    Russia on Friday offered to mediate between the government and opposition in Venezuela if necessary, saying it was ready to cooperate with all political forces that acted responsibly, the RIA news agency reported. The comments came a day after Moscow said Nicolas Maduro was Venezuela’s legitimate president and not opposition leader Juan Guaido, who declared himself…

  • Ode to a Preposition

    Ode to a Preposition

    При: very capacious preposition When Russians are learning English, they complain about articles, verb tenses, modal verbs and prepositions. Having listened to a lot of Russian ranting about my native tongue over the years, I can attest that they eventually accept that the difficulties of the first three categories are just part of the structure…

  • 5,000 World Cup Fans Never Left Russia, Police Say

    5,000 World Cup Fans Never Left Russia, Police Say

    The World Cup party has long ended, but some fans seem to be unable to let go. Police have said that around 5,500 foreigners who traveled to Russia visa-free for the midsummer football tournament in 2018 are yet to leave, state media reported on Friday. Read More Mexico’s World Cup Party Goes on as Fan…

  • Russian Athletics Federation Retracts Appeal Against Doping Ban

    Russian Athletics Federation Retracts Appeal Against Doping Ban

    Russia’s athletics federation said on Friday it would withdraw its appeal against the decision by the global athletics governing body IAAF to prolong its suspension over evidence of state-sponsored doping. The federation had filed an appeal against at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in September against IAAF’s decision to extend the ban, imposed…

  • Foreign Investment in Russian Real Estate Highest Since 2012, Report Says

    Foreign Investment in Russian Real Estate Highest Since 2012, Report Says

    Investment in Russia’s commercial real estate reportedly hit six-year highs last year in a sign of the once-booming market’s recovery from geopolitical tensions. Foreign investment in Russian real estate took off in the 2000’s to reach 62 percent of all investment in the market between 2004 and 2008. Investment sentiment suffered after 2014 with Western…

  • NATO, Russia Meeting Fails to Resolve Dispute Over Russian Missile

    NATO, Russia Meeting Fails to Resolve Dispute Over Russian Missile

    Russia’s athletics federation said on Friday it would withdraw its appeal against the decision by the global athletics governing body IAAF to prolong its suspension over evidence of state-sponsored doping. The federation had filed an appeal against at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in September against IAAF’s decision to extend the ban, imposed…

  • Student Opens Fire on School in Siberia, Detained by Police

    Student Opens Fire on School in Siberia, Detained by Police

    Russian police reportedly prevented a school shooting in Siberia on Friday when they detained a student armed with a rifle who had opened fire on the building after being refused entry. Armed attacks have rocked schools across Russia over the past year, including a deadly October shooting and bombing at a college in annexed Crimea…

  • TVEL to supply fuel pellets for Tarapur NPP (India)

    TVEL Fuel company of ROSATOM and the Department of Atomic Energy of the Government of India signed the contract for supplies of uranium fuel pellets for the units of Tarapur NPP powered by BWR reactors. According to the contract, in 2019, several dozen tons of the pellets produced by Machine-building Plant (MSZ JSC), a fabrication…

  • TVEL to supply fuel pellets for Tarapur NPP in India

    TVEL Fuel company of ROSATOM and the Department of Atomic Energy of the Government of India signed the contract for supplies of uranium fuel pellets for the units of Tarapur NPP powered by BWR reactors. According to the contract, in 2019, several tons of the pellets produced by Machine-building Plant (MSZ JSC), a fabrication facility…

  • Thousands Evacuated as New Bomb Scare Sweeps Russia

    Thousands Evacuated as New Bomb Scare Sweeps Russia

    Thousands of people have been evacuated from public buildings in at least seven Russian regions over bomb threats in the second wave of panic to have hit this month. Russia has been hit by mass bomb scares since late 2017, when anonymous phone calls about planted explosives in 170 cities turned out to be fake.…

  • Students Celebrate Tatiana’s Day

    Students Celebrate Tatiana’s Day

    On Jan. 25, it’s good to be a Tatiana Kirill Zykov / Moskva News Agency Are you a student? Is your name Tatiana? If the answer to either (or both) of these questions is yes, then today is quite literally your day. In Russia, Jan. 25 is Tatiana’s Day—otherwise known as student’s day—and Moscow has…

  • Guns, Oil and Loans: What’s at Stake for Russia in Venezuela?

    Guns, Oil and Loans: What’s at Stake for Russia in Venezuela?

    Nicolas Maduro, Igor Sechin and Manuel Quevedo, December 16, 2017 / Reuters The United States and a slew of Latin American nations have recognized Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido as interim president, leaving Nicolas Maduro ever more isolated. Though China is Venezuela’s top lender, Russia has also been a long-standing ally of Maduro and his…

  • Armed Men Attack Police in Russia’s North Caucasus, at Least 3 Suspects Killed

    Armed Men Attack Police in Russia’s North Caucasus, at Least 3 Suspects Killed

    At least three armed suspects who attacked traffic police in Russia’s North Caucasus on Thursday night have been shot and killed, investigators have said. The restive region has been the site of frequent attacks on law enforcement officials, including a grenade attack on National Guard troops in Ingushetia last December. Armed attacks have also been…

  • U.S. Offers to Hold Talks on the Question of Arms Control With Russia

    U.S. Offers to Hold Talks on the Question of Arms Control With Russia

    The United States has offered to hold talks on arm control issues with Russia on the sidelines of a United Nations meeting in Beijing next week, a senior State Department official said on Thursday. Under Secretary of State Andrea Thompson told reporters the talks almost certainly would include a dispute over a Cold War-era treaty…

  • New Stealth Drone Spotted in Far East Russia — Reports

    New Stealth Drone Spotted in Far East Russia — Reports

    A new Russian stealth drone has been reportedly photographed in detail for what may be the first time in Siberia. Military analysts said first grainy images of Okhotnik, an unmanned combat air vehicle (UCAV) built by the Sukhoi design bureau, may have appeared online as early as 2017. On Wednesday, the U.S. aviation online outlet…

  • Gazprom actively working to expand gas infrastructure in Sakhalin Region

    Gazprom actively working to expand gas infrastructure in Sakhalin Region

    Release January 24, 2019, 17:10 A working meeting between Alexey Miller, Chairman of the Gazprom Management Committee, and Valery Limarenko, Acting Governor of the Sakhalin Region, took place in St. Petersburg today. The parties reviewed the implementation of the Cooperation Agreement, noting the strategic nature of interactions between Gazprom and the Government of the Sakhalin Region. As part of the Eastern Gas Program, the Company is developing…

  • PhosAgro CEO Andrey Guryev Takes Part in Panel Session on ‘Russian Economic Outlook’ at the World Economic Forum in Davos

    PhosAgro CEO Andrey Guryev Takes Part in Panel Session on ‘Russian Economic Outlook’ at the World Economic Forum in Davos

    Davos – Andrey Guryev, President of the Russian Association of Fertilizer Producers and CEO of PhosAgro, one of the world’s largest producers of phosphate-based fertilizers, took part in a panel session called ‘The Russian Economic Outlook’, which took place at Russia House as part of the business programme at the 49th Annual Meeting of the…

  • Russians Took Out 46% More Personal Loans in 2018 — $130 Bln

    Russians Took Out 46% More Personal Loans in 2018 — $130 Bln

    Russians reportedly took out 8.61 trillion rubles ($130 billion) in loans last year as real personal incomes declined. Russian economic growth has been hampered by a volatile currency, low oil prices and Western sanctions since Moscow’s 2014 annexation of the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine. Real disposable incomes were forecast to drop for the fifth year in…

  • Russia Intercepts Swedish Spy Plane Over Baltic, Posts Video Footage

    Russia Intercepts Swedish Spy Plane Over Baltic, Posts Video Footage

    Russia’s Defense Ministry has published video footage of its fighter jets intercepting a Swedish reconnaissance plane over the Baltic Sea. Russia and NATO countries have increasingly scrambled their jets to intercept each other’s aircraft in recent years. Military think-tanks have warned of growing Russian-NATO airspace interactions as tensions at their borders are on the rise.…

  • Russian Lawmakers Move to Criminalize ‘Disrespecting’ the Government and Fake News

    Russian Lawmakers Move to Criminalize ‘Disrespecting’ the Government and Fake News

    Russian lawmakers passed highly contentious legislation Thursday that seeks to enact punishments for disrespecting the Russian government or spreading fake news. Deputies submitted legislation last month to impose fines for “blatantly disrespecting” Russian institutions or posting “untruthful socially significant information.” Commentators have suggested that the loose wording of the law could lead to mass arrests, joking that there…

  • Russia Cautions U.S. Against Military Intervention in Venezuela, Reports

    Russia Cautions U.S. Against Military Intervention in Venezuela, Reports

    Russia on Thursday warned the United States not to intervene militarily in Venezuela, saying such a move would trigger a catastrophic scenario, the Interfax news agency cited the deputy foreign minister as saying. Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido declared himself interim president on Wednesday, winning the backing of Washington and many Latin American nations and…

  • Cossacks: From the Persecuted to the Protectors (in Photos)

    Cossacks: From the Persecuted to the Protectors (in Photos)

    Jan. 24, 1919: One hundred years ago today, the Bolsheviks passed a decree calling for the elimination of the Cossacks in a campaign of “merciless mass terror.” The resulting decossackization program led to the execution and suffering of tens of thousands of people.  Today, Cossacks have reclaimed their role as protectors of Russian tradition and have cultivated increasingly close ties…