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Market Matters: Struggling Stocks Spur New Record Oil Prices Oil hit another record of just under $143 as global stocks tumbled last week, with the Dow briefly dipping into bear market territory as investors sought safety in gold, government debt and the Swiss franc.
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Saturday, July 19, 2008
Updated at 17 July 2008 23:26 Moscow Time
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Issue 3947 Published: 18 July 2008 Download PDF
U.S. Spurs Hopes of An End to HIV Tests
By Svetlana Osadchuk / Staff Writer In an indication that Russia may end mandatory HIV tests for foreign residents, government officials said Thursday that they were considering replicating pending U.S. legislation that would lift a ban on HIV-positive visitors to that country.
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Dudley Warns Fight Tearing TNK-BP Apart
By Anatoly Medetsky, Miriam Elder and Anna Yukhananov / Special to The Moscow Times The company’s chief executive rejects a lawsuit against him from a group of Russians and vows to continue working.
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About 50,000 Museum Pieces Lost
The Associated Press A sweeping government audit has revealed that up to 50,000 pieces are missing from Russia’s museums — everything from pre-Revolutionary medals and weapons to precious works of art, a member of the survey team said Thursday.
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Germany Presents Abkhazia Proposal
Reuters Germany on Thursday presented a three-stage plan aimed at ending the deadlock in Georgia’s conflict with its breakaway province of Abkhazia.
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News in Brief
Dutch Architect RobbedKhodorkovsky Free in Fall?Decapitated Head Found
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Parrots Killed for Beer
Combined Reports Police in Nizhny Novgorod have arrested a man who shot dead two pet parrots after his wife refused to buy him beer, news agencies reported.
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Tens of Thousands March 90 Years After Tsar's Death
By Steve Gutterman / The Associated Press Tens of thousands of Russians commemorated the 90th anniversary of the slaying of the country's royal family with a religious procession Thursday, starting out before dawn from the site where the last tsar and his wife and children were gunned down in a basement room.
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Ex-Senator Convicted of Fraud
By Yelena Shuster / Special to The Moscow Times The Moscow City Court on Thursday convicted former Kalmykia Senator Levon Chakhmakhchyan of fraud and sentenced him to nine years in prison, concluding a case that saw his lawyer flee the country and receive political asylum in the United States.
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Rosneft Set to Clear $22Bln Yukos Loan
By Dmitry Zhdannikov and Christopher Mangham / Reuters The firm will soon pay off a huge bridging loan taken to buy Yukos assets. It still has net debt of over $20 billion.
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Bill to Let Ferry Tourists Spend 3 Days in St. Pete
By Anna Yukhananov / Special to The Moscow Times Businesses and officials in St. Petersburg, Russia's most popular tourist destination, are lining up behind a proposed law that would allow ferry passengers to spend up to three days in the city without a visa.
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Defense Contracts In Doubt
Combined Reports The country's defense industry lacks the resources to meet all its arms export contracts, Russian Technologies chief Sergei Chemezov said Thursday.
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Evraz Buys Stake in Australian Miner
Bloomberg Evraz Group, a steelmaker partly owned by billionaire Roman Abramovich, bought a 16 percent stake in Australian firm Cape Lambert Iron Ore, potentially derailing a bid to sell the company's mine to China.
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E.On Starts Building Mega Plant
Reuters Germany’s E.On began building two 400-megawatt turbines at a power station in the country’s oil heartland, which when completed would make it the largest station in the world, the utility said Thursday.
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President Plugs IT, Democracy
Reuters Modern communications technology should become a gateway to democracy in Russia, President Dmitry Medvedev said Thursday, ordering his ministers to improve online public access to the government.
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Business in Brief
Inter RAO Favors EdFAlcoa Antitrust Investigation$2.5Bln Radio Investment?Customs Planning Overhaul78% of SDM-Bank BoughtFederal Grid Undervalued?For the Record
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Michele A. Berdy: A Duck by Any Other Name
English-speaking readers of Kommersant might have been disconcerted to learn that the new U.S. ambassador to the Russian Federation is a bird. In fact, he's two birds.
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Linking Communism With Nazism
By Maxim Shevchenko Lithuania is the latest country to conduct a hysterical campaign that equates Soviet symbols with Nazism.
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The Last Tsar Was Michael, Not Nicholas
By W. George Krasnow The 90th anniversary of the massacre of the Romanovs in Yekaterinburg has been raised to a new dimension thanks to the city of Perm. Since 1991, a growing number of Perm residents have argued that the last legitimate ruler of Russia was not Nicholas II, but his younger brother Michael. Recently, their cause got a mighty boost -- from Britain, of all places.
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Armed With Nukes and a Vague Plan
By Simon Saradzhyan / Staff Writer When Vladimir Putin became acting president on New Year’s Eve in 1999, he took over a country whose armed forces were struggling to fill combat-ready units to fight guerillas in Chechnya.
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