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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • Updated
    9
    hours
    ago

    US diplomat in spy flap leaves Moscow, Russian TV reports

    FSB via AFP - Getty Images file

    A handout photo taken early on May 14 and released by Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) shows a man, identified as Ryan C. Fogle being questioned after his arrest.

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The U.S. diplomat who Russia claims tried to recruit one of its intelligence officials to spy for the CIA has left Moscow, Kremlin-loyal TV reported on Sunday.

    A Russian NTV broadcast appeared to show the U.S. embassy employee, Ryan Christian Fogle, moving through security at the Sheremetyevo International Airport in Moscow on Sunday, according to reports from the Associated Press and the BBC.

    Fogle’s flight left on Sunday, according to the reports.

    It was unclear where Fogle was heading. The U.S. Embassy has refused to comment on details of the case.

    Fogle, who reportedly was wearing a blond wig, carrying cash, and had technical equipment when arrested, was briefly detained last week by Russian authorities. Russia declared Fogle "persona non grata" and ordered his expulsion last Tuesday.

    The Russians identified him as the third secretary of the political division of the U.S. Embassy. The State Department said only that an officer at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow had been detained and released.

    The Russian security service, known as the FSB, released to Russian media photographs of the American’s arrest and what it said were items he had with him, including two wigs, a torch, a compass and a wad of 500-euro notes, each worth $650.

    Russian television also displayed a letter it said was found on Fogle, printed in Russian, that offered $100,000 for a potential CIA recruit.

    After the decision to expel Fogle was made, the Russians then revealed a person they purport is the CIA station chief in Moscow.

    According to a NBC News translation of FSB's statement on Fogle's arrest, American intelligence has made multiple attempts lately to recruit employees of Russian law enforcement agencies and special divisions, the Russians claim.

    Related:

    'Spirit of the Cold War': Russia says US diplomat was trying to recruit for CIA

    Ryan Fogle, a 29-year-old U.S. Embassy employee, was reportedly caught trying to recruit a Russian intelligence official to work for the CIA.  NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    This story was originally published on Sun May 19, 2013 4:15 PM EDT

    62 comments

    If he was a member of the diplomatic mission to Russia, Russia didn't get anything for releasing him, they had to, he had diplomatic immunity. That is why embassies are havens for spies, they can't be arrested, just PNG'ed (persona non grata).

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world, russia, cia, arrest, spy, updated, moscow, embassy, fsb
  • 3
    days
    ago

    Russia's Putin to commute to work by helicopter

     

    Alexey Druzhinin / AFP - Getty Images file

    Russia's President Vladimir Putin takes a seat in a limo after his arrival at Schiphol airport near Amsterdam, on April 8, 2013.

    By Steve Gutterman, Reuters

    President Vladimir Putin will soon fly to work by helicopter rather than being driven there in his usual Mercedes limousine to try to appease anger over traffic jams created by his motorcade.

    A helicopter pad has been built in the Kremlin "and the president will use it at the first opportunity," presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in the Black Sea resort of Sochi, where Putin spends most summers at a government residence.

    Russia's post-Soviet shift to capitalism and the oil-fueled boom of Putin's initial 2000-2008 presidency have clogged Moscow's once uncrowded streets with cars, making for traffic jams that rival overburdened cities worldwide.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The problem worsens when main arteries in the capital are closed off to let motorcades pass, a frequent occurrence as some officials and other influential figures have permission to use blue lights on their vehicles, giving them traffic privileges.

    This has sparked resentment among ordinary Muscovites and led to the creation of the "Blue Buckets" protest group, whose members place blue buckets on their car roofs in a mocking reference to the motorcades.

    Putin, who started a six-year term last May after weathering the biggest opposition protests of his time in power, apologized last year after saying he heard motorists honking their horns in unison at his motorcade.

    Since then he has spent more days at his residence outside Moscow to avoid creating the traffic jams. Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev began commuting to the government headquarters by helicopter a few months ago for the same reason.

    Putin and his late predecessor Boris Yeltsin had occasionally traveled to the Kremlin by helicopter, landing in a central square near the main office in the former fortress and its centuries-old onion-domed cathedrals, Peskov said.

    The new helicopter pad is in a more obscure area closer to the Kremlin's red brick exterior walls and chosen "to rule out harmful effects on the architectural monuments," Peskov said.

    Putin, who often talks of the need for patriotism and national pride to unite Russians, will use a Russian-made Mi-8 helicopter, said Peskov, who did not specify how often the president would commute by air.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    10 comments

    Blue buckets on car tops. lol Seems Russians are good at getting their point across.

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    Explore related topics: featured, russia, putin, helicopter, moscow
  • Updated
    5
    days
    ago

    'Spirit of the Cold War': Russia says US diplomat was trying to recruit for CIA

    Ryan Fogle, a 29-year-old U.S. Embassy employee, was reportedly caught trying to recruit a Russian intelligence official to work for the CIA.  NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By Anna Nemtsova, Robert Windrem, Alastair Jamieson and Erin McClam, NBC News

    Evoking the spy games of the Cold War, Russia said Tuesday that it had detained an American diplomat who was carrying cash, two wigs and technical equipment and was trying to recruit a Russian intelligence official to work for the CIA.

    Russia ordered the expulsion of the American diplomat, whom it identified as Ryan Christopher Fogle, third secretary of the political division of the U.S. Embassy. The State Department said only that an officer at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow had been detained and released.

    American officials said they did not expect a rift in U.S.-Russian relations. U.S. officials are trying to improve those relations, and to persuade Russia to help resolve a civil war in Syria.

    FSB via AP

    Wigs and spy gadgets that the Russian Federal Security Service says were carried by American diplomat Ryan Fogle.

    Russia used stronger language, calling the matter provocative and in the spirit of the Cold War.

    A statement by the Russian Federal Security Service, the successor agency to the Soviet-era KGB, said that Fogle was taken to the service’s headquarters and then to the U.S. embassy after his arrest Monday night.

    The security service, known as the FSB, released to Russian media photographs of the American’s arrest and what it said were items he had with him, including the wigs, a torch, a compass and a wad of 500-euro notes, each worth $650.

    Russian television also displayed a letter it said was found on Fogle, printed in Russian and addressed “Dear friend.” The letter offered a $100,000 payment as “an advance from someone who has been highly impressed by your professionalism, and who would highly value your cooperation in the future.”

    The statement from the security service said that the U.S. had “repeatedly attempted to recruit employees of Russian law enforcement bodies and special departments” recently.

    The U.S. ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul, was participating in a question-and-answer session on Twitter when the detention was announced. He was summoned to Russia’s foreign ministry, The Associated Press reported.

    Experts expressed surprise at the old-school nature of the alleged espionage, but they noted that intelligence-gathering had not stopped just because the Cold War ended more than two decades ago.

    FSB via AP

    In this photo provided by Russian Federal Security Service, a man claimed by the service to be Ryan Fogle is seen at the service's offices in Moscow.

    “If anything, it has increased,” said James Nixey, head of the Russia and Eurasia Programme at the British think tank Chatham House. “The methods have changed — or so we thought — because it’s more about industrial espionage and corruption these days.”

    Besides the diplomacy over Syria, there have been questions about whether Russia gave the United States enough information about Tamerlan Tsarnaev, one of the suspects in the attack on the Boston Marathon.

    Russian officials asked the U.S. for more information about Tsarnaev, who was born in what is now Russia and traveled to Russia early last year. Russia suspected that Tsarnaev was becoming radicalized, American officials have said.

    The FBI interviewed him in 2011 and turned up nothing, and when the FBI asked Russia twice for more information about its concern, Russia failed to respond, the American officials said. Tsarnaev was killed April 19 in a shootout with police.

    President Barack Obama later said Russia had cooperated since the attack but noted: “Old habits die hard. There are still suspicions sometimes between our intelligence and law enforcement agencies that date back 10, 20, 30 years, back to the Cold War.”

    The incident would not be the only intelligence blunder in Russia. Britain admitted bugging a Moscow park in 2006 by disguising a recording device as a big rock. The FSB saw a British diplomat picking it up and walking away with it.

    Related: 

    Full Russia coverage from NBC News

    Editor’s note: This story includes a correction.

    This story was originally published on Tue May 14, 2013 7:59 PM EDT

    323 comments

    Ops, we got caught with our hand in the cookie jar.

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    Explore related topics: russia, cia, world, arrest, spy, embassy, moscow, featured, fsb, updated
  • Updated
    26
    Apr
    2013
    11:13am, EDT

    38 dead in horrific blaze at Russian psychiatric hospital

    At least 38 people were killed in a fire at a psychiatric hospital north of Moscow. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    Thirty-eight people were killed by a fire that raged through an isolated psychiatric hospital north of Moscow on Friday, killing some patients in their beds and others who were trapped by barred windows.

    Most of the patients died in their sleep inhaling the fumes as they were likely sedated by prescribed medicine, a police source told the RIA Novosti news agency.

    Firefighters were delayed getting to the single-story building because of a closed river crossing. The trip took an hour instead of the expected 20 minutes, according to Russia Today, citing local news outlet Komsomolskaya Pravda.

    A small tunnel was discovered dug out under the burned hospital, suggesting that one of the patients may have been planning an escape, Russia Today said.

    Only three people - one nurse and two patients - escaped from the fire, which broke out at about 2 a.m. local time Friday (6 p.m. ET Thursday) in the village of Ramensky, 70 miles north of Moscow. 

    Pavel Sergeyev / AP

    Firefighters and authorities work at a site of a fire of a psychiatric hospital north of Moscow on Friday.

    The blaze tore through a collection of wood and brick huts with bars on some windows that was home to people sectioned by Russian courts.

    Russia’s Emergencies Ministry published a list of 41 patients and medical staff – ranging in age from 20 to 76 - who were inside the facility when the fire started [PDF link in Russian]. Two medical staff listed as “to be verified” are believed to be dead, Russia Today reported.

    By mid morning, a few blackened walls were left standing, Reuters reported. The roof had caved in on top of the twisted metal of what were once beds. Bodies lay on nearby grass, covered with blankets. 

    Irina Gumennaya, aide to the head of the chief investigative department of the Moscow region, dismissed suggestions they had been physically restrained as "rubbish" but promised blood tests to check whether there were high levels of sedatives. 

     

    UPDATE: 25 bodies recovered after fire at Moscow hospital; 36 people killed - Russia’s Investigative Committee on.rt.com/w0hexh

    — RT (@RT_com) April 26, 2013

    "The wards ... did not have doors, the sick could have escaped from the building by themselves," she said, according to Reuters, adding that she believed the most likely cause of the blaze was patients smoking, or perhaps a short circuit. 

    Andrei Vorobyov, interim governor of the Moscow region, told Russia 24 television: "Those who were in there said it happened in a flash. The nurse opened the door to the room and there was smoke, and even when she saw the fire she could not get to the fire extinguisher. It all happened very quickly."

    Reuters said more than 12,000 people were killed in fires in Russia in 2011 and more than 7,700 in the first nine months of 2012.

    The per capita death rate from fires in Russia is much higher than in Western nations including the United States. Reuters reported:

    President Vladimir Putin called for an explanation of the "tragedy" and told emergency services to do all they could to help.

    Fires at state institutions in Russia such as hospitals, schools, drug treatment centers and homes for the elderly or disabled often cause casualties, raising questions about safety measures, conditions and escape routes.

    Some people stood on the opposite bank of the Moscow canal from the hospital, trying to get across to check whether their relatives had survived. The police had stopped the ferry and fishing boats were not allowed to cross.

    "They are not letting the relatives in. Why? How can we get there?" said Konstantin, whose father was in the hospital. "Living conditions? It was a slum in there. No conditions."

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    • Full Russia coverage from NBC News

    AFP - Getty Images

    A handout photo released by emergency services shows flames rising from the burning psychiatric hospital.

    This story was originally published on Fri Apr 26, 2013 4:43 AM EDT

    120 comments

    Damn, there are a lot of sick puppies posting on these threads. People are dead. Have a little compassion for Christ's sake.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, world, russia, fire, safety, hospital, updated, moscow, patients, psychiatric
  • 21
    Mar
    2013
    6:18am, EDT

    Dancer claims Bolshoi Theater was 'big brothel'

    Dima Korotayev / Reuters, file

    Russian ballerina Anastasia Volochkova, seen in 2003, claimed dancers would receive a call and be told they were "going to a party and a dinner ending in bed."

    By Vladimir Isachenkov, The Associated Press

    A former prima ballerina at Russia’s world-famous Bolshoi Theater has claimed in a television interview that dancers were essentially used as high-class prostitutes.

    The allegation -- dismissed by the Moscow theater -- was made amid a power struggle for control of the company and in the aftermath of an acid attack in January on the Bolshoi’s artistic director that exposed rivalries reminiscent of the Hollywood movie "Black Swan."

    Former Bolshoi prima ballerina Anastasia Volochkova alleged on Russia’s state-controlled NTV station that the Bolshoi was a "big brothel."

    A Russian ballet star, who is famous for playing villains such as Ivan the Terrible has confessed to masterminding an acid attack on the Bolshoi Ballet's artistic director. Matthew Cain, of Channel Four Europe, reports.

    "An administrator would call them to say they are going to a party and a dinner ending in bed," she said.

    "When the girls asked the administrator what would happen if they refuse, the answer was: You will have problems in the Bolshoi then,” she added.

    Volochkova acknowledged that she herself enjoyed the protection of a billionaire businessman and was fired in 2003 after they separated.

    Venomous
    Volochkova made the claims when she appeared on an NTV show Sunday with principal dancer Nikolai Tsiskaridze, who is vying to take over from the Bolshoi’s General Director Anatoly Iksanov, who has been in the top job for 13 years.

    Both are believed to have backing from senior government officials and Kremlin-connected business tycoons eager to extend their influence over a state theater that has been a symbol of national pride for centuries, and even features on the 100-ruble bill.

    Alexander Zemlianichenko / AP, file

    Bolshoi ballet dancer Nikolai Tsiskaridze is locked in a battle for control of the Bolshoi with its General Director Anatoly Iksanov.

    Iksanov accuses Tsiskaridze of creating an atmosphere of intrigue that set the scene for the Jan. 17 acid attack on the Bolshoi's artistic director.

    Tsiskaridze rejects the claims and in turn points to the attack as evidence that the theater has descended into crime and violence under Iksanov's watch.

    After weeks of increasingly venomous attacks from both sides, Tsiskaridze's star was seen as rising when he grabbed a high-profile platform for his case on NTV.

    The exposure came even as Tsiskaridze has endorsed the grievances of the Bolshoi dancer accused of staging the attack on artistic director Sergei Filin, and defended the dancer in public. Tsiskaridze himself has not been accused of any involvement in the attack.

    On NTV, Tsiskaridze poured scorn on Iksanov, accusing him of botching the Bolshoi's reconstruction, ruining its repertoire and treating dancers like slaves.

    Asked bluntly whether he was ready to take the general director's job, Tsiskaridze answered proudly: "I am absolutely ready."

    More than anything else, the NTV show signaled that Iksanov's job could be in jeopardy.

    The station has often been used to broadcast documentary-style films about Kremlin foes that have often served as precursors for criminal investigations.

    A biting attack on the general director would not have been possible without a blessing from the top ranks of the government. 

    Related:

    Bolshoi's 'Ivan the Terrible' confesses to acid attack on Moscow ballet director

    Bolshoi director leaves hospital, describes 'unbearable' pain of acid attack

    Russia Bolshoi Ballet acid victim: I forgive my attacker

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    134 comments

    A recent biography of Stalin clearly documented the routine requirement of actresses, dancers and all attractive notable females to be consorts of high communist officials. Rejection of their overtures meant potential exile to the Gulag, a penalty frequently imposed.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, russia, theater, moscow, ballet, bolshoi, anastasia-volochkova
  • 6
    Mar
    2013
    6:31am, EST

    Bolshoi's 'Ivan the Terrible' confesses to acid attack on Moscow ballet director

    Russia Interior Ministry Press Service handout, via Reuters

    Pavel Dmitrichenko, seen after his arrest, left, and performing as Ivan the Terrible, right, suggested he had not meant for the attack to go so far.

    By Thomas Grove and Maria Tsvetkova, Reuters

    MOSCOW - A dancer at Russia's Bolshoi ballet who made his name playing villains has confessed to ordering the acid attack that nearly blinded its director. Sources said he was angry that his lover was being kept out of leading roles.

    Pavel Dmitrichenko, who has danced the crazed monarch in Ivan the Terrible and the villain in Swan Lake, was detained on Tuesday over a crime that shocked Russia and blackened the reputation of the world-famous theater.


    Haggard and unkempt, Dmitrichenko was shown in a police video confessing to plotting the attack, in which a masked man threw a jar of sulphuric acid in the face of artistic director Sergei Filin late on Jan. 17.

    "I organized this attack, but not to the extent that it happened," he said, apparently meaning he did not intend the attack go so far.

    Russian police say that 29-year-old Pavel Dmitrichenko, a star dancer with the renowned Bolshoi Ballet, has admitted masterminding the January acid attack on the ballet's artistic director, who suffered severe burns to his hands and face.

    Two other men who had no known connection to the Bolshoi also confessed in the video released by police. One said he had thrown the acid at Filin and the other that he had driven the getaway car.

    LifeNews, a Russian website with close ties to the police, said the suspected attacker, Yury Zarutsky, and his driver Andrei Lipatov were found by tracking cellphone calls made from the crime scene.

    Dmitrichenko, who is in his late 20s, said he had given the reasons for the attack in a written statement to police but did not say what they were on camera.

    A source at the Bolshoi confirmed media reports that the outspoken dancer was angry that his partner, ballerina Anzhelika Vorontsova, had missed out on top roles including the lead in Swan Lake.

    "Filin certainly squeezed out Vorontsova, but that is not a reason to throw acid in someone's face," the source told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

    Russia Interior Ministry Press Service handout, via Reuters

    Andrei Lipatov, left, allegedly drove the getaway car and Yury Zarutsky, right, is accused of carrying out the attack.

    Before flying to Germany for treatment last month to save his sight, Filin, 42, said he believed he knew who was behind the attack and that he thought it was connected with his work. He is recovering and is expected back at work this summer.

    The management of the Bolshoi, which declined to make any comment Wednesday, had been hoping none of the ballet company was involved in the attack as this might limit damage to its reputation and morale.

    Dmitrichenko, born in Moscow to a family of dancers, had been at the Bolshoi since 2002 and was to dance in "Sleeping Beauty" this month. He could face jail and the end of his dance career.

    As artistic director of the Bolshoi's ballet company, Filin had the power to make or break careers in the fiercely competitive world of ballet. Tales of his uncompromising grip on the troupe and his disagreements with dancers have been widely reported in the Russian press.

    Bolshoi Ballet's artistic director, Sergei Filin, recalls the "unbearable pain" from January's acid attack as he leaves a Moscow hospital for treatment in Germany. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Related:

    Bolshoi director describes 'unbearable' pain of acid attack

    Russia Bolshoi Ballet acid victim: I forgive my attacker

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    41 comments

    A ballet dancer in a Siberian prison camp? There's a one-episode reality show.

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    Explore related topics: europe, featured, world, russia, moscow, ballet, acid-attack, bolshoi, sergei-filin
  • 4
    Feb
    2013
    10:45am, EST

    Bolshoi director leaves hospital, describes 'unbearable' pain of acid attack

    Bolshoi Ballet's artistic director, Sergei Filin, recalls the "unbearable pain" from January's acid attack as he leaves a Moscow hospital for treatment in Germany. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Anastasia Gorelova and Thomas Grove, Reuters

    MOSCOW — The Bolshoi Ballet's artistic director, Sergei Filin, left a Moscow hospital on Monday to have treatment in Germany after an acid attack that damaged his eyes and face.

    Wearing dark glasses but saying he felt well, the 42-year-old said before checking out of the hospital that he knew who was behind last month's attack and made clear he believed it was linked to his work at Russia's prestigious Bolshoi Theater.


    Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    "I feel well, I'd even say great, if only my eyes could see a bit better. But I can say I feel well," he told reporters as he left, wearing a netted bandage across the lower part of his face.

    Filin told Russian state television about the agony he experienced after the attack, which occurred as he was walking home at night from the Bolshoi on Jan. 17. "I fell on my face in the snow and began to rub snow in my face and eyes," he said.

    "I was in terrible, unbearable pain."

    He said he lay in the empty street in front of his apartment building for 20 minutes after the attack, pressing his face into the snow, until he caught the attention of a security guard who called an ambulance. 

    Filin also told the television crew before leaving the hospital that he forgave his masked attacker, who splashed acid in his face outside his Moscow apartment.

    Asked if he knew who had attacked him, he said in the television interview: "Every person has an organ called a heart, and my heart knows who did it, and in my soul I have an answer to that question."

    Filin had been one of the most talked-about figures in Russia as head of the ballet for nearly two years when he was attacked. He said the attack followed repeated threats and may have been motivated by rivalry or resentment.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    9 comments

    I wish him healing and hope that his sight improves.

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    Explore related topics: europe, featured, world, russia, moscow, acid-attack, bolshoi-ballet, sergei-filin
  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    4:02pm, EST

    Russian parliament backs ban on 'gay propaganda'

    Yuri Kochetkov / EPA

    Russian Interior Ministry officers detain two gay rights activists during an unsanctioned protest in front of the Duma, Russia's lower house of parliament, in Moscow on Friday.

    By Gabriela Baczynska and Alissa de Carbonnel, Reuters

    Russia's parliament backed a draft law on Friday banning "homosexual propaganda," in what critics see as an attempt to shore up support for President Vladimir Putin in the country's largely conservative society.

    Only one deputy in the State Duma lower house voted against the bill, but passions spilled over outside the chamber, where 20 people were detained after scuffles between Russian Orthodox Christians and gay activists who staged a "kiss-in" protest.

    "We live in Russia, not Sodom and Gomorrah," United Russia deputy Dmitry Sablin said before the 388-1 vote in the 450-seat chamber. "Russia is a thousands-years-old country founded on its own traditional values - the protection of which is dearer to me than even oil and gas."


    Veteran human rights campaigner Lyudmila Alexeyeva described the draft law as "medieval" and said it was intended to appeal to conservative voters after months of protests that have sapped Putin's popularity.

    "It (the Duma) is relying on the ignorance of people who think homosexuality is some sort of distortion," she said.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The legislation has served to deepen divisions in society since Putin returned to the presidency in May and began moves seen by the opposition as designed to crackdown on dissent and smother civil society.

    During the process, Putin and his supporters have underlined what they see as conservative, traditional Russian values.

    He has drawn closer to the Russian Orthodox Church during this time, hoping the support of one of the most influential institutions in Russia will consolidate his grip on power.

    Scuffles outside the Duma
    In a sign of the passions caused by the bill, clashes broke out between supporters and opponents outside the Duma, a few hundred meters from the Kremlin in central Moscow.

    Supporters, some of them holding Russian Orthodox icons and crosses, cheered and threw eggs as police hauled away gay activists, one of whom was splashed with green paint. Police said 20 people had been held.

    The law must be passed in three readings by the lower house, approved by the upper house and then signed by Putin to go into force. It would ban the promotion of gay events across Russia and impose fines of up 500,000 roubles ($16,600) on organizers.

    Supporters of the law welcome moves that would allow the banning of gay rights marches and complain about television and radio programs which they say show support for gay couples.

    "The spread of gay propaganda among minors violates their rights," ruling United Russia party deputy, Elena Mizulina, who chairs the Duma's family issues committee. "Russian society is more conservative so the passing of this law is justified."

    Putin's critics say the law is the latest in a series of legislative moves intended to stifle the opposition.

    In a sign Kremlin-loyal lawmakers hope to eliminate all opposition in the house, two deputies who joined in street protests against Putin said on Friday that their Just Russia party threatened to kick them out if they continued to do so.

    Public approval for Putin, who is now 60, stood in January at 62 percent, the lowest level since June 2000, an independent pollster said on Thursday.

    Putin and the church
    Putin, a former KGB spy who has criticized gays for failing to help reverse Russia's population decline, has increasingly looked for support among conservative constituencies and particularly the church to offset his falling support.

    The Russian Orthodox Church, resurgent since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, has spoken out against homosexuality. Putin drew closer to the clergy during the trial and sentencing this summer of three members of the Pussy Riot punk band over their protest in the country's main cathedral.

    Anti-gay propaganda laws are already in place in Arkhangelsk, Novosibirsk and St Petersburg, Putin's home city, where it was used unsuccessfully to sue American singer Madonna for $10 million for promoting gay love during a concert last year.

    Some deputies raised concerns the bill would be misused, asking how it would define homosexuality, and one said the house was meddling in issues beyond its scope.

    "Do you seriously think that you can foster homosexuality via propaganda?" the only deputy who voted against the bill, United Russia's Sergei Kuzin, challenged its authors during the debate.

    Homosexuality, punished with jail terms in the Soviet Union, was decriminalized in Russia in 1993, but much of the gay community remains underground and prejudice runs deep.

    In Moscow, city authorities have repeatedly declined permission to stage gay parades and gay rights' allies have often ended in arrests and clashes with anti-gay activists.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    136 comments

    Hey Republicans... Your in good company....Putin and Muslims feel the same way you do when it comes to homosexuality. You should be soooo proud.

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    Explore related topics: featured, gay, russia, putin, moscow
  • 21
    Jan
    2013
    12:44pm, EST

    Kremlin begins evacuation of Russians from Syria

    Syrian troops have been fighting off rebels who are trying to capture military bases in the north of the country. Attacks on government bases have been the recent focus of fighting in the Syria conflict. The daily struggle continues for families in the South as buying bread means crossing the front line. NBC's Bill Neely reports.

    By Kari Huus, Staff writer, NBC News

    Moscow is sending two planes to Lebanon for the evacuation of Russian citizens from Syria as the fighting in the capital Damascus intensifies, marking the first such effort since the uprising against Syrian President Bashar Assad began in March 2011.

    The Emergency Situations Ministry said two of its planes will fly to Beirut on Tuesday to carry more than 100 Russians from Syria.


    Russia has been a stalwart ally of the Assad regime even as his government became increasingly isolated from most of the international community. It has used its veto power, as a permanent of the U.N. security council, to block three United Nations Security Council resolutions condemning Syria.

    Moscow has also supplied Assad's military with helicopters and jets.

    Monday's announcement appears to reflect Moscow's increasing doubts about Assad's ability to cling to power and growing concerns about the safety of its citizens.

    On Saturday, two shells landed near the Russian embassy, hitting a wedding hall and killing three women, one of the hall's guards said. It was not clear who fired the shells. The area is government controlled.

    The Russian embassy, which is along Damascus' central al-Thawra road, is heavily fortified with cement road blocks and the area has been blocked off.

    Russia has plans in place to evacuate thousands of Russians from Syria if necessary, the country's foreign ministry said.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    49 comments

    Assad is just about finished. Get ready for a new Islamist failed state in the ME

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  • 18
    Jan
    2013
    3:49pm, EST

    Attacker splashes acid on Bolshoi ballet troupe's artistic director

    Sergei Filin, the artistic director of the world renowned Bolshoi Ballet, was attacked outside his apartment by a masked man who threw acid on his face. NBC's Annabel Roberts reports.

    By Steve Gutterman and Thomas Grove, Reuters

    MOSCOW — A masked attacker threw acid in the face of the artistic director of Russia's prestigious Bolshoi Ballet, endangering his eyesight, in what colleagues said on Friday was the culmination of a two-week campaign of intimidation.

    Sergei Filin, a former leading dancer at the Bolshoi who has been in the high-pressure job at the heart of Russian culture for nearly two years, was attacked outside his Moscow apartment building as he returned home on Thursday night.

    Such is the prestige of Filin's post in Russian life, and its power inside the theater, that stunned current and former colleagues suggested the motive could have been envy, rivalry or even competition for roles.


    Filin, his face covered in bandages with holes for the mouth and eyes, sounded relieved to have survived the attack.


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    "I was scared. I thought he was going to shoot me, honestly ... and I turned to run but he chased me down," Filin told Russia's REN TV.

    "He turned and his face was completely covered, either a scarf or some bandage like a mask, only eyes (to be seen)."

    The theater's director, Anatoly Iksanov, had no doubt the attack was aimed at sowing discord in an institution that has rarely been at peace in a history stretching back to the era of Catherine the Great.

    Filin, 42, had reported having his car tires slashed and his emails hacked in recent weeks, as well as receiving repeated nuisance calls from someone who stayed silent when he answered.

    "This two-week campaign has ended tragically and despicably," Iksanov said, adding that the culprit "should be sought among those for whom it was beneficial to compromise the theater leadership".

    War for roles?
    Bolshoi spokeswoman Katerina Novikova had been out with Filin at another theater on Thursday evening and parted with him shortly before the attack.

    "We just never thought that the war for roles - not for real estate, not for oil - could reach such a criminal level," she said.

    Alexander Natruskin / Reuters, file

    Several stars at the Bolshoi have complained about alleged unfair treatment at the hands of Sergei Filin, seen here in 2011.

    Relatives, dancers and theater administrators flocked overnight to the hospital where Filin was being treated, and later gathered at the theater.

    Some suggested that making enemies, or at least generating resentment, was a hazard that came with the post.

    "This person was doing his job," Bolshoi soloist Anastasia Meskova said, choking back tears. "Of course, it's clear that there may have been people who were dissatisfied, but I can't even imagine what would have been the reason (for the attack)."

    Russian media said Filin had suffered third-degree burns and that doctors believed it would take him at least six months to recover.

    Filin told Iksanov he believed he had been followed home, and that the attacker had called his name before throwing acid on his face.

    "There are very serious burns on his face, in his ears, on his forehead, his mouth, and of course there are serious concerns about his eyesight," Iksanov said.

    Channel One television said doctors were "trying to save his eyesight", but Interfax news agency quoted the theater's press office as saying late on Friday he had undergone successful surgery and that a complete loss of eyesight was not expected.

    Filin was to be flown to a burn center in Brussels for further treatment, Novikova said. State television later said it was unclear whether he would be moved there on Friday.

    The Bolshoi, which has both ballet and opera troupes, reopened last February after a six-year renovation to its landmark colonnaded building, close to Red Square in the very center of Moscow.

    Cultural icon
    As a near-mythical icon of Russian culture, it is a magnet for both locals and foreign tourists, and has seen power struggles among both dancers and directors throughout its more than 200 years of history.

    Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, many of those conflicts, whether driven by egos or artistic convictions, have been played out in public.

    In 2003, Iksanov dismissed ballerina Anastasia Volochkova after reportedly saying she was too heavy for male dancers to lift, and in 2011 a senior ballet manager resigned after a scandal over sexually explicit photographs.

    After the tightly controlled three-decade tenure of Yuri Grigorovich ended in 1995, the Bolshoi Ballet went through five artistic directors before the appointment in March 2011 of Filin, who joined the Bolshoi's ballet troupe in 1988.

    Filin's predecessor Alexei Ratmansky, who is now an artist in residence at the American Ballet Theater, said the attack was "no coincidence."

    In a Facebook posting, he called the Bolshoi a "revolting sewer" plagued by hangers-on, ticket scalpers and "half-crazed fans ready to chew through the throats of their idols' rivals."

    He used the familiar version of Filin's name to end his posting with the words: "Seryozha - the swiftest recovery, and courage!"

    Filin's mother, Natalya, said he had been threatened but that she did not know who could have been behind the attack, according to the RIA news agency.

    "What's important to me now is the health of my son, that he does not lose his eyesight," she said.

    Joy Womack, an American dancer at the Bolshoi, urged "friends, fans and family" on Facebook to "stop what you are doing and pray for Sergei."

    "He was attacked by evil people," she wrote. "Pray that the attackers would be apprehended and dealt with in the severity of the law."

    Related:

    NYT: Sniper kills mobster in busy Moscow street

    Texas teen is 1st American to graduate from top Russian ballet school

    Full Russia coverage from NBC News

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    57 comments

    Ballet is a nasty little world all its own. The men and women that live in that realm put up with any number of criticisms and little social tortures from the physical to the psychological.

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  • 29
    Dec
    2012
    11:15am, EST

    Jet rolls off Moscow runway, splits apart

    A jet breaks into pieces after sliding off the runway at a Moscow airport. NBC's Kate Snow reports.

    By Alissa de Carbonnel, Reuters

    MOSCOW -- A Russian airliner split into pieces after it slid off the runway and crashed onto a highway outside Moscow on Saturday, killing at least four of the 12 crew on board and leaving smoking chunks of fuselage on the icy road.

    Television footage showed the Tupolev 204 jet, broken into pieces, with smoke billowing from the tail end and the cockpit broken clean off the front. 

    A man was thrown from the plane as it rammed into the barrier of the highway outside Vnukovo airport, one witness told the TV channel Rossiya-24.


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    Another witness described pulling other people from the wreckage.

    "The plane split into three pieces," Yelena Krylova, chief spokeswoman for the airport, said in televised comments.


    An Emergency Services spokesman said four people died of injuries after the crash and four others were in hospital. Police said 12 crew members were on board, but no passengers.

    "The plane went off the runway, broke through the barrier and caught fire," police spokesman Gennady Bogachyov said.

    The mid-range Tu-204 was operated by the Russian airline Red Wings and was traveling from the Czech Republic, Krylova said.

    Rubble from the crash was scattered across the highway and the plane's wings were torn from the fuselage, witnesses said.

    Alexander Usoltsev / AP

    Rescuers work at the site of the plane crash at Moscow's Vnukovo airport on Saturday.

    "We saw how the plane skidded off the runway ... The nose, where business class is, broke off and a man fell out," said a witness, who gave his name as Alexei. "We helped him get into a mini-bus to take him to the hospital."

    Another witness described pulling four people from the wreckage when he arrived at the scene before emergency service workers. "We could not get the pilot out of the cockpit but we saw a lot of blood," he told Rossiya-24.

    Russian investigators said preliminary findings pointed to pilot error as the cause of the crash.

    Russia and other former Soviet republics had some of the world's worst air-traffic safety records last year, with a total accident rate almost three times the world average, the International Air Transport Association said.

    A passenger jet crashed and burst into flames after takeoff in Siberia in April, killing 31 people, and an airliner slammed into a riverbank in September 2011, wiping out the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl ice hockey team in a crash that killed 44 people.

    The Russian-built Tu-204, which is comparable in size to a Boeing 757 or Airbus A321, is a Soviet-era design that was produced in the mid-1990s but is no longer being made. There have no major accidents previously reported with Tu-204s.

    The crash during peak holiday travel ahead of Russia's New Year's vacation, which runs from Sunday through Jan. 9, cast a spotlight on Russia's poor air-safety record despite President Vladimir Putin's calls to improve controls. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • India gang-rape victim dies in hospital; case focused attention on sexual violence
    • Putin signs law banning American adoptions
    • US sailors sue Japan's TEPCO for post-quake radiation exposure
    • 'Depressing,' 'manipulative' portrayals damage hunger work in Africa, Oxfam complains
    • Warm glow of Berlin's 'beautiful' gas streetlights set to fade
    • Poll: London Olympics cheered up gloomy Brits
    • Video: William and Kate spend holiday with the Middletons
    • Boy's Christmas wish: Adoption of little brother caught in US-Russia spat

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    163 comments

    That pretty much mirrors the country as a whole......splitting, tearing, ripping apart at the seams.

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  • 14
    Dec
    2012
    3:56am, EST

    Russia launches fraud, money laundering probe against opposition leader Navalny

    Andrey Smirnov / AFP - Getty Images

    Russian opposition activist and blogger Alexei Navalny (center) is detained by the police on Oct. 27 during a protest over a wave of arrests and allegations that an opposition leader was tortured.

    By Reuters

    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    MOSCOW -- Russia has opened a criminal investigation against opposition leader Alexei Navalny on suspicion of fraud and money laundering, the federal investigative committee said Friday.

    Navalny, an anti-corruption blogger who has organized protests in the past 12 months against President Vladimir Putin, already faces charges of theft that he says are politically motivated and part of a Kremlin clampdown on dissent.

    Rock Center Correspondent Harry Smith journeys to Moscow, where he meets blogger Alexei Navalny, a vocal opponent of Vladimir Putin and his party, United Russia. Navalny has galvanized protesters through social media and uses his website to expose alleged political corruption. The surging public outrage has left some wondering if a movement is afoot in Russia similar to that of last year's Arab Spring. 

    The federal investigative committee, a government agency, said on its website that Navalny and his brother were being investigated over the alleged theft of $1.79 million by a trading company they are involved in.

    Related content:

    Anti-Putin activists pay high price, but refuse to back down

    Kremlin's photo-doctoring backfires big time

    'Swindlers and thieves': Anti-corruption blogger challenges Putin after leaving Russian jail

    It announced the investigation one day before the opposition plans a new march against Putin in Moscow.

    Navalny was not immediately available for comment. He has denied the earlier charges, over the alleged theft of timber from a state company in the Kirov region when he was advising the governor there in 2009.

    Navalny is threatened with 10 years in jail if found guilty of the earlier charges.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • ANALYSIS: Egypt's military keeps close eye on politics
    • EXCLUSIVE: Susan Rice drops out of running for secretary of state
    • North Korean progress on nuclear arms, long-range missiles rattle U.S. and allies
    • 'Who is my Mandela?' South Africans consider icon's place in a changing world
    • Google+ Hangout from Egypt with NBC News' Ayman Mohyeldin
    • Royal prank call: Duped nurse was found hanging, also had wrist injuries

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    13 comments

    This is not at all unexpected. This guy has ruffled Putin's feathers and now he will pay for it. This is the way politics works in countries like Russia. Putin will see to it that anyone who becomes a serious challenge to his control over Russia ends up in prison or otherwise disgraced.

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    Explore related topics: featured, russia, vladimir-putin, moscow, alexei-navalny
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