07/07/2005
Paid access archivePress Review
A brief look at the stories making headlines in the Russian-language press
Councilman Held in Gruesome Killing
A Moscow district councilman has been detained by police on suspicion of killing a man, chopping up the body and disposing of the remains in Izmailovsky Park, police said Wednesday.
American Signs Up as Space Tourist
The Federal Space Agency has signed a space tourist contract with U.S. millionaire Gregory Olsen, a spokesman said Wednesday, in a deal that would make the 60-year-old scientist only the third tourist to visit the international space station.
Gryzlov Says Rival Rodina Not Yet a Faction
State Duma Speaker Boris Gryzlov said Wednesday that the chamber's Management Committee had jumped the gun in granting Sergei Baburin's group of nine nationalist deputies permission to set up a faction to rival Rodina.
Electoral Bills Passed in Final Reading
The State Duma on Wednesday finalized electoral reforms seen by the Kremlin as enhancing political stability but by critics as risking a revolution by alienated government opponents.
Kyrgyz Prepare for Key Vote
Meder Usenov led anti-government protests in this southern city three months ago, throwing punches at police officers and urging crowds of demonstrators not to back off.
News in Brief
Bad Air Quality Thursday Harmful emissions in Moscow's air are expected to exceed permissible levels by 2.5 times for several hours Thursday, a jump that often occurs when dry and windless weather sets in, the federal weather bureau said Wednesday. A warm front that arrived in Moscow on Tuesday has blocked rain and wind that would normally disperse emissions from traffic and factories, bureau spokeswoman Natalya Yershova said. Rain, however, is expected Thursday afternoon, she said. Moscow's air quality was also bad on Wednesday, with harmful emissions such as nitrogen dioxide and phenol exceeding permissible levels by 1.5 times. Levels were even higher in the area around the All-Russian Exhibition Center, the bureau said. (MT) U.S. Rejects Pullout Call WASHINGTON -- The United States rejected a call from an alliance led by Russia and China to set a deadline for withdrawing its forces from Central Asian countries. U.S. troops fighting in Afghanistan have been based in Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan.
- Confidence Rebounds in June
- Business in Brief
- Rosneft Goes After Sibneft Shares
- Rosneft Inks $23Bln Kazakh Deal
- Moody Hints at Upgrade in Russia's Rating
- Shell Close to Gazprom Deal
- Novatek, Gazprom Sign Cooperation Agreement
- Novatek Reveals Owners
- Dagestan Rebel Chief Is Killed
- Insurgents Target Diplomats in Iraq
- Iraqi TV Confessions Criticized
- G8 Protesters, Police Face Off
- Koizumi Bets on Postal Reform
- U.S. Bowing to WTO Over Cotton Subsidy
- Wolfowitz Urges Cuts in Farm Aid
- Nigeria Risks Civil War in Oil Row
- Violent Censorship
- Who's Scared of Whom?
- The Story of Who Got Married on Santorini
- Smertin: Inspired by Chelsea
- London Delighted at Olympic Victory
- As Olympic Bid Fails, Music Plays On
- Leaked G8 Paper Is Open to Interpretation
- Ukraine Lawmakers Brawl In Debate Over WTO Entry
- Blackout Inquiry Finds Errors
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