06/09/2004
Paid access archivePress Review
A brief look at the stories making headlines in the Russian-language press
Why Putin Refused an Invitation to Istanbul
Organizers of the NATO summit later this month will have their work cut out for them as they try to justify dragging the leaders of the 26 member states to Istanbul.
Yanked 'Namedni' Interview Was the Best Alibi
The big economic story last week was the appointment of Russian business tycoon and ethnic Georgian Kakha Bendukidze as Georgian economics minister. The big media story last week was the sacking of NTV anchor Leonid Parfyonov.
Does Putin's Russia Deserve to Be in the G8?
At Moscow State University in 1988, the late U.S. President Ronald Reagan talked to students about freedom and democracy.
New Funds Vie for Investors' Trust
Burgeoning property magnates take note: Since the appearance of the first real estate investment funds in Russia last year, buying property is no longer the only way to invest in the real estate market.
Ask a Stupid Question
What do I need to do to take my dog and cat out of Russia?
News in Brief
Market Toll Rises to 11 MOSCOW (AP) -- A man who was injured in a bomb blast at an outdoor market in Samara last week has died in the hospital, bringing the death toll in the explosion to 11. The victim, a 35-year-old man, had been hospitalized with severe head wounds after Friday's blast, Interfax reported Tuesday. He died late Monday. Forty people remained hospitalized. Cemetery Bombing MOSCOW (AP) -- A man acquitted of carrying out a deadly 1996 bombing at the Kotlyakovo cemetery was convicted Monday of weapons possession and sentenced to three years of internal exile. Andrei Anokhin was acquitted in 2000 of involvement in the blast, which killed 14 people at a graveside memorial service for the head of a fund for disabled veterans of the Afghan War. The fund enjoyed lucrative customs privileges. But the verdict was overturned, and Anokhin was detained in November after allegedly running from the law. Prosecutors said he pulled out a pistol while police were checking his documents.
Kadyrov Says Troops Not Needed
The Kremlin should withdraw federal troops from Chechnya because local law enforcement forces are now powerful enough to fight rebels on their own, First Deputy Chechen Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov said in an interview published this week.
- A Stinking Compound 100 Kids Call Home
- Health Agency Approves Safe Swimming Spots
- Car Bombings Strike Mosul, Baqubah
- Memo: U.S. Not Bound by Torture Law
- U.S. Calls for Vote on Iraq Resolution
- Americans Pay Respects to Reagan
- Sky-Gazers See Venus in Rare Show
- Oracle Trial Reveals Surprise
- Survey: Nokia's Share of Market Falls in Q1
- Police Seek Tougher Road Laws
- Yukos Gets Green Light to Sell Cannabis Vodka
- Kazakhstan Has Its Own Space Dreams
- Mongolian Diplomat's Son Killed
- Television Advertising Monopoly Unplugged
- One Trial for Khodorkovsky, Lebedev
- City Hall Axes First Auction to Build Skyscrapers
- Gazprom Ends Feud With Getty
- Ukraine Puts Off Major Steel Privatization
- Putin Eyes Mexican Gas, Oil Markets
- Business in Brief
- PM Wants UES Shares for Assets
- Trade Surplus Jumps by 18%
- Ukrainian Venture Wins U.S. Order for Iraq Army
- Illarionov Protests G8 Fees
- Bush and Critics Square Up for G8
- Energy Producers See Cash in Kyoto
- Detectives Make Business Less of a Lottery
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