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  • Recommended: Israeli inquiry: 'No evidence' Palestinian boy in infamous photo was killed by IDF
  • Recommended: Egypt's 'rebels' gather millions of signatures to protest Morsi
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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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  • 24
    Sep
    2012
    8:03am, EDT

    Report: Ex-Iran president's son returns from exile to answer charges of inciting protests

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    The son of former Iranian president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani has reportedly returned to Iran from exile to answer charges of inciting unrest after a disputed election in 2009, fueling speculation that Rafsanjani's influence in Tehran may once again be growing. 

    Hasan Sarbakhshian / AP file

    Former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, one of the founding figures of the Islamic Republic, incurred the anger of conservatives after backing opposition candidates in 2009 elections.

    Mehdi Hashemi Rafsanjani arrived in Tehran late on Sunday, the Iran-based Fars news agency reported, having spent three years in the United Kingdom following his alleged involvement in the widespread protests that followed the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. 

    Mehdi Rafsanjani had spent several days in Dubai and had been expected to return to Iran on Sunday, an independent source told Reuters. 

    Analysts say his return indicates a deal has been agreed with authorities to resolve the charges he faces, and suggests his father's political fortunes may be reviving. 

    Akbar Rafsanjani played a central role in the Non-Aligned Movement summit in Tehran last month, being photographed walking alongside Iran's most powerful authority, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and sat next to U.N. Secretary General Ban-Ki Moon. 

    If the Rafsanjani family fortunes are changing, it may well have to do with his reputation as a business leader who could help boost the country's flagging economy, NBC News' Tehran bureau chief Ali Arouzi said. 

    Report: Iran commander warns of 'World War III'

    As oil sanctions continue to bite and with a presidential election set for next year, some are tipping the pragmatic yet conservative Rafsanjani as a surprise candidate. 

    While they have faced persecution in recent years, the family is at the heart of the system and is reputed to be hugely wealthy, Arouzi said.  

    "Rafsanjani is a businessman first and foremost," he said. "He could be brought back in to the presidential arena (to) act as a go-between for the hardliners and reformists."

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton indicates that Iran is running out of time to negotiate over its nuclear program. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    The Rafsanjanis have faced heightened pressure from hardliners since the 2009 vote, which set off the deepest political crisis and worst unrest in Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The former president is one of the founding figures of the Islamic Republic and a close aide to the revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. 

    Iran readies domestic Internet, blocks Google

    But his backing of opposition candidates in 2009 and sympathy for opposition demonstrators incurred the anger of conservatives and led to a decline in his influence. 

    Mehdi Rafsanjani's reported return comes 24 hours after another member of the powerful and wealthy Rafsanjani family, his sister Faezeh, began a six-month jail sentence for "spreading anti-state propaganda."

    Slideshow: Everyday life in Iran

    At schools, in shops, and on the streets of big cities and small towns, daily life plays out in Iran.

    Launch slideshow

    Her conviction at the start of this year is believed to be over an interview she gave to an opposition news site in which she criticized human rights violations and economic policy in Iran.

    NBC News' Ali Arouzi and Reuters contributed to this report. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Report: Riots break out at Foxconn factory in China
    • Many Muslims denouncing anti-Islam film decry violent protests, too
    • Thousands descend on Dutch town after Facebook invite goes viral
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    18 comments

    Why do we have to keep seeing this photo of an Iranian woman playing the guitar as part of the "daily life" in Iran.After months.it´s quite boring.Of course people have a daily life even under the most barbaric fascist brutal regime.I suppose you could have published a photo of a man as sipp …

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    Explore related topics: iran, election, president, protests, exile, rafsanjani, featured, arouzi
  • 30
    Jun
    2012
    7:40am, EDT

    Islamist Mohammed Morsi sworn in as Egypt president

    Mohammed Morsi officially became the president of Egypt on Saturday, as a new era of government takes shape. NBC's Kate Snow reports.

    By NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin and msnbc.com news services

    Egypt's first Islamist president, Mohammed Morsi, took his oath of office on Saturday, ending six decades of rule by former military men although the generals in charge since Hosni Mubarak was ousted last year have already curbed his powers. 

    Morsi was sworn in before the Supreme Constitutional Court, rather than parliament as is usual. The Islamist-led lower house was dissolved by the same court shortly before this month's run-off presidential election.  


    "I swear by Almighty God that I will sincerely protect the republican system and that I respect the constitution and the rule of law," Morsi said, after making the same declaration a day earlier in front of tens of thousands of people in Tahrir Square.

    Egypt, Mother of the World, turns new page; citizens await results

    "I will look after the interests of the people and protect the independence of the nation and safety of its territory," he said before the head of the constitutional court Farouk Soltan and other judges. 

    'The will of the people'
    He was speaking in the court building next to the Cairo hospital where the jailed former president has been moved. 

    Morsi said a civilian and constitutional state had been "born today," in his comments after swearing the oath. The ceremony was broadcast by state media. 

    As Morsi takes office, many fear the 'Islamization of Egyptian society'

    One of the judges, Maher Sami, began the ceremony by saying that event had "no parallel in all of Egypt's history and was created by the will of the people." 

    In his inaugural address to the nation, Morsi began by paying tribute to the martyrs of the revolution and vowed to honor their sacrifices through his work and the administration's work.

    He reiterated points he has made repeatedly before about working to strengthen Egypt's economy and restarting investment and trade. 

    Israel treaty safe
    He also said Egypt would abide by all of its international treaties and obligations -- meaning the 33-year-old peace treaty with Israel -- and promised to work to make Egypt a modern civil state that upholds laws and abides by the constitution.

    "We carry a message of peace to the world," Morsi said in a segment intended to reassure the world that his tenure posed no threat to regional order.

    New York-area politicians condemn Egypt's new leader over bid to free terrorist

    He struck a rather defiant tone by saying on more than one occasion that the Egyptian people had democratically elected a parliament and that the will of the people must be respected.

    He promised the state would be made up of democratic institutions and that the military would return to its bases and its role of defending the country. He promised to strengthen and develop the Armed Forces and to keep Egypt's judiciary independent.

    On foreign policy, Morsi said he we would stand with the Palestinian people until they achieved their legitimate rights and sovereignty over their land. He added that he would work to help Palestinian national reconciliation.

    Huge crowds are expected to gather to see Egypt's new president Mohammed Morsi take an oath of office on Saturday. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Morsi said Egypt stood with the people of Syria and that the bloodshed must end. In a nod to Arab monarchies, he promised Egypt would not attempt to export its revolution to other countries and that Egypt would not accept other countries interfering in its domestic affairs. 

    On Friday, Morsi defied the ruling generals by reading a symbolic oath of office in Tahrir Square, where Egypt's revolution was born. 

    "Everybody is hearing me now. The government ... the military and the police. ... No power above this power," he told the tens of thousands of mostly Islamist supporters packing the square. "I reaffirm to you I will not give up any of the president's authorities. I can't afford to do this. I don't have that right." 

    Post-revolution Egyptians to US: Stay out

    At one point, Morsi opened his jacket to show the crowd he was not wearing a bulletproof vest, then declared he "fears no one but God." 

    "We love you Morsi!" the crowd roared in response as the 60-year-old U.S.-trained engineer left the podium to get closer to the cheering crowd. 

    AFP - Getty Images

    An image grab taken from Egypt's Nile TV shows Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi taking the oath of office during a swearing-in ceremony at the Constitutional Court in Cairo Saturday.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    93 comments

    Watch the slow and steady march to mullahs' Iran after the Shah of Iran's rule! As seventh century Sunni Saudi extremists like Salaffi, MB are behind him, it will be worse than Iran in the long run!

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    Explore related topics: egypt, president, muslim-brotherhood, islamist, featured, morsi
  • 6
    Jun
    2012
    5:12pm, EDT

    Mexican presidential candidate becomes poster boy for infidelity

    Alexandre Meneghini / AP

    Cars pass by a billboard of Mexican presidential candidate Enrique Pena Nieto of the Revolutionary Institutional Party (PRI) in Mexico City, Wednesday, June 6, 2012.

    By Reuters

    Mexican presidential front-runner Enrique Pena Nieto has become the unwitting poster boy for a website promoting adultery after he admitted cheating on his first wife.

    A new Mexican billboard by ashleymadison.com, a site that helps married people arrange affairs, shows Pena Nieto with an index finger over his lips in a hushing gesture.

    Next to him are the words: "Unfaithful to his family. Faithful and committed to his country."


    Pena Nieto, candidate of the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), has said he fathered two children out of wedlock by different women while married to his first wife.

    Henry Romero / Reuters

    Enrique Pena Nieto, presidential candidate of the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), arrives to attend "10 questions on education", as part of a civic meeting with the presidential candidates in Mexico City June 4, 2012.

    The billboard, mounted above a busy avenue in Mexico City, shows the 45-year-old with bright red lipstick on his collar. His campaign had no immediate comment on the advertisement.

    Ricardo Castaneda, Ashley Madison's representative in Mexico, said the billboard was put in the capital this week and that others are planned for the cities of Monterrey and Guadalajara.

    Castaneda told Mexican media no one would have found out about Pena Nieto's extramarital affair, if the presidential hopeful had employed Ashely Madison's services.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    The masthead on the company's website reads "Life is short. Have an affair," and Castaneda said the service has acquired 300,000 users since opening for business in Mexico in November, making it Ashley Madison's fastest growing market.

    Pena Nieto's looks have made him popular among women, who make up a majority of eligible voters in Mexico. He is often mobbed by screaming female followers on campaign.

    Pena Nieto's first wife, who died in 2007, bore him three children. He is now married to a popular soap opera star and is favorite to win the July 1 presidential election.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    105 comments

    Bill Clinton is running for President of Mexico?

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  • 2
    Jun
    2012
    3:39am, EDT

    Report: Egypt's ex-ruler Mubarak suffers health crisis after he gets life sentence

    Protesters fill Cairo's Tahrir Square after former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is sentenced to 25 years in prison. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 7:20 p.m. ET: CAIRO - Egypt's ousted ruler Hosni Mubarak was sentenced to life in prison Saturday for complicity in the killings of protesters who eventually overthrew him. He could have received the death penalty.

    Presiding judge Ahmed Refaat also sentenced his former interior minister, Habib el-Adli, to life in prison on the same charge. But Mubarak's two sons -- Gamal and Alaa -- were acquitted on corruption charges.   

    The mixed ruling set off street protests and by nightfall, a large crowd of up to 10,000 was back in Cairo's Tahrir Square, the birthplace of the uprising, to vent anger over the acquittals. Similar protesters were held in other cities, including the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria and Suez on the Red Sea.


    On Sunday morning, dozens of young Egyptians stormed into the campaign headquarters of presidential candidate Ahmed Shafiq for the Fayoum area south of Cairo on Sunday, the state's Al-Ahram news website reported.

    All the headquarters contents including furniture and computer devices were destroyed, Al-Ahram online said. It was the second attack on Shafiq's headquarters in few days.

    Shafiq was the last prime minister of deposed president Hosni Mubarak and his success in getting through to a second round of Egypt's presidential election has angered opponents who see him as a symbol of a regime that they took to the streets to oust in mass protests.

    Shafiq on Saturday said Mubarak's sentence proved no one was above the law.

    "Those rulings certainly disprove any claims that a presidential candidate can reproduce a ruling system that has ended," he said, responding to critics who say Shafiq would revive the old order.

    Protesters disagreed.

    "Justice was not served," said Ramadan Ahmed, whose son was killed on Jan. 28, the bloodiest day of last year's uprising. "This is a sham," he said outside the courthouse.

    Protesters chanted: "A farce a farce, this trial is a farce" and "The people want execution of the murderer."

    NBC News, citing state TV, said Mubarak was taken to Tora prison after the court hearing. Egypt TV quoted unidentified medical sources as saying Mubarak had suffered a health crisis as he arrived at the prison and was being treated in the helicopter that transported him and then in the prison hospital. 

    Asmaa Waguih / Reuters

    Pictures of people who died during last year's revolution are seen in front of security forces next to the courthouse in Cairo where former president Hosni Mubarak will heard the verdict in his trial Saturday.

    The Ahram Online newspaper reported Saturday Mubarak, wearing sunglasses, a beige top and black trousers, was wheeled in to the police academy for the hearing as he lay on a stretcher.

    Judge: 30 years of tyranny
    The judge 
    said the uprising ended 30 years of tyranny, saying the people who protested against poverty and oppression were peaceful, according to the newspaper.

    Mubarak, 84, was acquitted of the graft charges he faced. His life sentence -- which in Egypt typically is 25 years but in Mubarak's case really means the rest of his life -- was for failing to prevent the killing of 900 protesters.

    Mubarak's ex-security chief, Habib el-Adly, also was convicted of complicity in the killings and received a life sentence.

    Violent reactions between both opponents and supporters of Former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak can be seen after Mubarak was sentenced to life in prison for the killing of protesters.

    A statement issued by the Muslim Brotherhood's presidential campaign team called for a retrial.

    "The public prosecutor did not carry out its full duty in gathering adequate evidence to convict the accused for killing protesters," said Yasser Ali, official spokesman for the Mohamed Mursi campaign. 

    Others also expressed discontent.

    "Initial, fleeting satisfaction, followed by disappointment, and then anger," said Shadi Hamid, director of research at the Brookings Doha Center and a fellow at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution, in a message on Twitter. 

    "I'd think this verdict would spur greater consensus between Islamists ... and liberals," he added.

    'Filled with anger'
    Nader Bakkar, the spokesman of Al-Nour Salafist Party, said in a tweet translated by Ahram Online that Egyptians were "filled with anger and disappointment."

    But some reacted with joy at the news.

    Voters lined up in Cairo to choose from five leading candidates: a socialist, two Islamists, and two with ties to former President Hosni Mubarak. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    Soha Saeed, the wife of one of about 850 people killed in the street revolt that toppled Mubarak on Feb. 11, 2011, shouted: "I'm so happy. I'm so happy."  

    Can voters force candidates to compromise in Egypt run-off?

    Few Egyptians expected Mubarak would go to the gallows, even if some thought that was what he deserved. Protesters have often hung his effigy from lamp posts since he fell on February 11, 2011. 

    NBC's Richard Engel spoke with former President Jimmy Carter to talk about Egypt's elections and the country's future. The Carter Center has been in Egypt monitoring the presidential elections.

    Runoff could take Egypt's voters on one of two very different paths

    NBC News' Charlene Gubash, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    230 comments

    This trial of Mubarak has done one thing, it as ensured that no other Middle East dictator will step down peacefully. Anyone who does not think that Assad is looking at what is happening to Mubarak and saying to himself why would I ever step aside is completely naive.

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  • 25
    May
    2012
    10:01am, EDT

    Egypt's next president to be an Islamist or Mubarak's former premier?

    AFP - Getty Images

    Egyptian election officials count ballot papers at a polling station in Alexandria after polls closed Thursday.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    Egypt's first free presidential election could be heading for a contest between an Islamist candidate and a former air force chief who was a leading member of ousted leader Hosni Mubarak's last government.

    According to results from 25 out of 27 areas – put together by the Ahram Online news organization – Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohamed Mursi was ahead with 26.48 percent of the vote, while Mubarak's former prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, was just behind at 24.74 percent.


    Leftist Hamdeen Sabahy was in third, according to Ahram's figures, at 20.01 percent. They and the other candidates are vying for two places in a final run-off election on June 16 and 17.

    Runoff may offer Egypt's voters two stark paths

    Official results are not expected until Tuesday. 

    'I'm in shock'
    Young Egyptian revolutionaries who helped topple Mubarak now face what they see as a dispiriting choice between a conservative Islamist and a hardline member of the old guard. 

    "To choose between Shafiq or Mursi is like being asked do you want to commit suicide by being set on fire or jump in a shark tank," Adel Abdel Ghafar wrote on Twitter.

    In Egypt's elections, politics is a new family affair

    Tareq Farouq, 34, a Cairo driver, told Reuters he was in shock. "How could this happen? The people don't want Mursi or Shafiq. We're sick of both. They are driving people back to Tahrir Square," he said, referring to the home of the long-running protest camp.

    Voters lined up in Cairo to choose from five leading candidates: a socialist, two Islamists, and two with ties to former President Hosni Mubarak. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    This week's first-round vote has polarized Egyptians between those determined to avoid handing the presidency back to a man from Mubarak's era and those fearing an Islamist monopoly of ruling institutions.

    'We want to live ... like human beings': Egyptians vote

    The election marks a crucial step in a messy and often bloody transition to democracy, overseen by a military council that has pledged to hand power to a new president by July 1. 

    The second round threatens further turbulence. Opponents of Shafiq, Mubarak's last prime minister, have vowed to take to the streets if he is elected, Reuters reported. But to supporters, Shafiq's military background offers reassurance that he can restore security, a major demand of the population 15 months after Mubarak's ouster. 

    Israel nervous
    Many Christians, who form about a tenth of Egypt's 82 million people, complained of discrimination in Mubarak's day, but were likely to have voted for Shafiq in preference to an Islamist. 

    A victory for Mursi, Reuters said, could worsen tensions between resurgent Islamists and the powerful army, which sees itself as the guardian of the state. 

    Egypt's elections: A struggle between secularism and political Islam

    If Mursi becomes president, Islamists will control most ruling institutions – but not the military – in Egypt, the most populous Arab nation, consolidating electoral gains made by fellow-Islamists in other Arab countries in the past year. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    "Now Egyptians will have to choose between the revolution and the counter-revolution. The next vote will be equivalent to holding a referendum on the revolution," Mohamed Beltagy, a leader of the Muslim Brotherhood's party, told Reuters. 

    Israel has nervously watched the Islamist rise, especially in Egypt, its old enemy until a 1979 peace treaty. Mursi vaguely advocates a "review" of the pact, but the Brotherhood says it will not tear it up. Shafiq has vowed to uphold it. 

    The Brotherhood announced early on Friday that the run-off would be between Shafiq and Mursi after almost all votes were counted, Reuters said.

    A member of Shafiq's campaign also said Mursi and Shafiq were in the lead, but that counting was not complete, Reuters reported. Aides to other candidates consistently put Mursi ahead but gave shifting tallies for second place through the night. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    18 comments

    So a free Islamic nation has a choice for President Islamist or Dictator. Hmmm. Let me think. How about neither. The "facebook" generation that created this revolution is scratching their heads.

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    Explore related topics: elections, egypt, president, muslim-brotherhood, featured, mursi, shafiq, arab-spring
  • 23
    May
    2012
    7:00am, EDT

    Painting over a presidential penis: Sign of respect for South Africa's Zuma or vandalism?

    Iman Rappetti / Enews via AP

    Two pictures show an unidentified man defacing a controversial portrait of South African President Jacob Zuma at the Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Tuesday.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    Two men who vandalized a controversial painting of South African President Jacob Zuma with his genitals exposed were due to appear in court Wednesday.

    Television footage Tuesday showed a white middle-aged man in a suit walking up to the portrait, called The Spear, at a Johannesburg gallery and painting a red cross on the president's face and private parts, Reuters reported. A younger black man then  smeared black paint over the picture while the first man was being taken into custody by security guards.


    "I'm doing this because the painting is disrespectful to President Zuma," one of the men told BBC News.

    A BBC correspondent said he saw one of the vandals being head-butted as he was detained at the Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg.

    The picture of Zuma is a facsimile of a famous poster of communist revolutionary Vladimir Lenin. In the red, black and yellow painting, the president is shown striking Lenin's heroic stance, but with his penis hanging out of his trousers.

    Racist?
    Zuma's African National Congress party had already launched a legal bid to try to force the gallery to remove the picture, which it described as crude and racist.

    Minutes before the vandals attacked, ANC Secretary General Gwede Mantashe told Reuters people had a right to criticize the government, but there were limits.

    Farm worker found guilty over South African white supremacist's murder

    When you had an artist depicting the president's genitals, he added, "you are not raising a discussion, you are insulting people."

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Amid the controversy, supporters of South African President Jacob Zuma gather outside the South Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg on Tuesday.

    The artist, Brett Murray, is well-known in South Africa for his work criticizing the white-minority apartheid government that ended in 1994.

    The painting was taken down from display after the attack, prompting the Zimbabwe Mail newspaper to file a report headlined “Presidency penis goes into hiding.”

    'Paucity of morals'
    The Goodman Gallery said Murray’s exhibition, called Hail to the Thief II, “continues his acerbic attacks on abuses of power, corruption and political dumbness.”

    “Murray’s bronzes, etchings, paintings and silk-screens form part of a vitriolic and succinct censure of bad governance and are his attempts to humorously expose the paucity of morals and greed within the ruling elite,” the gallery said on its website, which was still showing an unvandalized image of the painting.

    Zuma has been married six times and fathered 21 children.

    Anton Harber, chairman of South Africa's Freedom of Expression Institute last week called the ANC's criticism of the picture "silly" and defended artists' right to pose difficult, uncomfortable questions with their work.

    Zuma sworn in as South Africa’s president

    The arrested men, Barend la Grange, and Lowie Mabokela were due to appear in court Wednesday, The City Press newspaper reported, along with a third man arrested outside the gallery after allegedly spraying paint on a wall.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    73 comments

    Maybe the painting should be titled 'letting it all hang out'! Seriously, if this was a nude portrait, I could see the 'parts' showing, but a fully dressed man with his 'privates' hanging out of his pants? Sort of disgusting. More pornographic than art, I'd say!

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    Explore related topics: art, president, south-africa, gallery, painting, featured, penis, jacob-zuma, vandalized
  • 2
    Apr
    2012
    9:39am, EDT

    Hungary President Pal Schmitt quits in plagiarism scandal

    Laszlo Beliczay/EPA

    Hungarian President Pal Schmitt (left) announces his resignation in parliament in Budapest, Hungary, Monday.

    By msnbc.com staff

    Hungary's president, former Olympic gold medalist Pal Schmitt, said Monday that he would resign after being accused of plagiarism and stripped of his doctorate, according to media reports.

    Schmitt has been the target of public ire over the past few days when he chose to stay in office despite evidence that he had transposed practically his entire doctoral thesis 20 years ago, local English language news site portfolio.hu reported.


    The BBC said Budapest's Semmelweis University last week revoked his 1992 award after finding that much of his thesis -- on the topic of the modern Olympic games -- was based entirely on earlier work by Bulgarian researcher Nikolai Georgiev.

    Schmitt, elected in 2010, said "my personal issue divides my beloved nation rather than unites it," according to the BBC report. "It is my duty to end my service and resign my mandate as president."

    'Ethical' criteria
    The BBC said Schmitt, 69, won gold medals for fencing at the 1968 and 1972 Olympic Games.

    The Bloomberg news agency reported that Schmitt has headed the Hungarian Olympic Committee since 1990 and was vice president of the International Olympic Committee from 1995 to 1999. He was a deputy state secretary for sports under communism in the 1980s.

    Schmitt's thesis "didn't meet the ethical and professional criteria of scientific work," Tivadar Tulassay, the rector of Semmelweis University was quoted as saying by Bloomberg, after the university stripped the president of his doctoral title.

    Tulassay himself quit Sunday, citing a "loss of trust| from the government ministry overseeing the university, Bloomberg said.

    An investigation began after the HVG.hu news website first alleged in January that Schmitt's thesis copied material from other research.

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    13 comments

    That wrinkly faced woman in your ads is truly a horror.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: europe, president, hungary, scandal, olympic, plagiarism, featured
  • 18
    Mar
    2012
    9:28am, EDT

    Anti-Communist pastor becomes German president

    By Reuters

    German lawmakers elected Joachim Gauck, a former Lutheran pastor and human rights activist from communist East Germany, as president of the European Union's largest country on Sunday by a large majority in a first round of voting.

    Norbert Lammert, speaker of the lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, said Gauck, 72, had won 991 votes in the federal assembly of national and regional lawmakers that is charged with choosing Germany's largely ceremonial head of state.


    His main rival, former Nazi-hunter and journalist Beate Klarsfeld, won 126 votes.

    Chancellor Angela Merkel reluctantly accepted Gauck for the mainly ceremonial post after her coalition ally joined opposition parties last month in backing him to replace Christian Wulff, who resigned in a scandal over financial favors.

    Unlike Wulff, a former lawmaker from Merkel's ruling centre-right Christian Democrats (CDU), the 72-year-old Gauck has no party affiliation. But he is known for speaking his mind - with the eloquence of a seasoned preacher - on controversial issues.

    Eighty percent of Germans trust Gauck, a former Lutheran pastor and human rights activist, according to an opinion poll by Infratest published on Saturday.

    Yet two thirds said they thought he would be an "uncomfortable" president for the country's political parties.

    In Germany, the president is chosen not by voters but by a special federal assembly comprising all 620 members of the Bundestag lower house of parliament and an equal number of delegates from the country's 16 regions.

    Gauck's election is assured as he has the support of the three ruling coalition parties including the CDU and of the opposition Social Democrats and Greens.

    "We expect a big majority (for Gauck)," said Frank-Walter Steinmeier, leader of the opposition Social Democrats.

    His only opponent is Beate Klarsfeld, 73, an anti-Nazi activist endorsed by the small Left Party.

    The German head of state has little executive power but is supposed to provide moral leadership, a role for which Gauck, a prominent figure in the peaceful protest movement that led to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, seems well-suited.

    "The president of the federal republic must be the guardian of the soul of our nation," said Sunday's edition of the top-selling daily Bild which also backed Gauck for the job in 2010.

    "Gauck's most important task is to restore dignity to this considerably tarnished office."

    Merkel and Gauck both hail from formerly Communist East Germany where her father was also a clergyman. They are said to have a good personal rapport, but she blocked a bid to install him as president in 2010 in favor of the ill-fated Wulff.

    Gauck has a rich life story shaped by the Cold War. When he was 11 his father was sent to the Siberian Gulag for alleged espionage and did not return for four years.

    That experience fostered an abiding aversion to totalitarianism, and he has said freedom will be the leitmotif of his presidency.

    After the fall of Communism and Germany's reunification, Gauck oversaw the archives of the dreaded Stasi, the East German secret police, earning recognition for exposing their crimes.

    As a purely symbolic head of state, Gauck poses no threat to Merkel's domination of German politics. But his moral authority and rhetorical gifts may dim some of her luster on the public stage.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    59 comments

    We could use someone like that as the US President (oh well)...

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    Explore related topics: germany, europe, president, angela-merkel, featured, joachim-gauck
  • 4
    Mar
    2012
    4:47am, EST

    Putin seeks convincing win as Russians vote in election

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    YEKATERINBURG, Russia - Vladimir Putin sought a convincing victory in Russia's presidential election on Sunday to strengthen his hand in dealing with the biggest opposition protests since he rose to power 12 years ago.

    Critics question the legitimacy of a vote they say is skewed to help the former KGB spy return to the Kremlin after four years as prime minister, and are threatening to step up protests that began after a disputed parliamentary poll in December.


    Putin's victory was not in doubt as voters cast ballots from Russia's Pacific coast across many sparsely populated swathes of territory to the western borders with the European Union. But he was hoping for an outright victory in the first round which he could portray as a strong mandate for six more years in power.

    Early signs were that turnout would be high. Officials said more than 12 percent of voters had cast ballots by 10 a.m Moscow time (1:00 a.m. ET) compared with 8.9 percent at the 2008 election that brought Putin's ally, Dmitry Medvedev, to the Kremlin.

    Could Vladimir Putin be in power until 2024? 10 key questions about Russia's elections

    Some voters expressed anger at being offered no real choice in a vote that pits Putin against four weaker candidates - communist Gennady Zyuganov, nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, former parliamentary speaker Sergei Mironov and billionaire metals tycoon Mikhail Prokhorov.

    Others said Putin, who has portrayed himself as a man of action, was the tough national leader Russia needed.

    "I will of course vote for Putin. Who else is there?," said Mikhail, a university student in Vladivostok, a port city of 600,000 on the Pacific coast.

    "I voted for the Soviets," said an aged man dressed in a shabby leather coat who declined to give his name. Asked if that meant Zyuganov, he said: "For Putin. He is raising our pensions, while Zyuganov is only making pledges."

    The last opinion polls before the election showed Putin, who was president from 2000 to 2008 before constitutional limits barred a third straight term, would win 59-66 percent of the vote, enough to avoid a second-round runoff.

    But a 22-year old student in the Urals city of Yekaterinburg student, declining to give her second name, said she would vote for the "rich and single" Prokhorov.

    Pyotr Kirillov, 75, said in Yekaterinburg that he had not changed his ideals in the past 50 years despite the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

    "I voted for our party, for Zyuganov," he said.

    Others were just indifferent. Yekaterinburg transport worker Alexander, fed up with politics and the lack of choice, said: "All of our family will go to our dacha (country house) today."

    Putin, 59, has been lionised by state television and is running against politicians who, with the exception of Prokhorov, have made a habit of losing elections to the Kremlin.

    But growing voter fatigue with Putin has unsettled Russia's elite of officials, former spies and billionaire businessmen: Putin's self-portrayal as the anchor of Russian stability hinges on his popularity.

    Bloggers have posted allegations of election rigging in and outside Moscow, suggesting groups of voters are being taken to one polling station after another to vote several times for Putin. This trick is known as carousel voting.

    "Wow, we were of course expecting carousels, but not on this scale," Alexei Navalny, a 35-year-old anti-corruption blogger and influential figure in the protest movement, wrote on his Twitter account.

    Election officials dismissed reports that there were widespread voting irregularities in December's poll, won by Putin's United Russia party.

    Michael McFaul, a laid-back Yankee in trouble in Putin's court

    In an attempt to allay fears of vote rigging, Putin ordered 182,000 web cameras to be installed at 91,000 polling stations to stream footage of ballot boxes and vote-counting onto a web site during the election.

    Thousands of opposition activists as well as an international observer mission are also monitoring the polls. Exit polls will be released shortly after voting ends.

    Russia's 59-year-old "alpha-dog" leader had to fight a tough campaign after initially misjudging the significance of the biggest protests of his 12 years in power.

    The protests were sparked by the disputed Dec. 4 election, but the anger was focused against Putin, who bungled the Sept. 24 announcement of his presidential bid by appearing simply to inform Russians that he would rule for another six years.

    Russia's opposition leaders, a fragmented group of activists, journalists and bloggers, are preparing rallies for the day after the vote and say the election is slanted in Putin's favour even without the vote rigging they expect.

    Navalny has said Putin's election cannot be legitimate and called for more protests, including tent camps in Moscow.

    Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    19 comments

    lets hope that Putin will be able to continue to play a useful role in international affairs and assist his country domestically. All the best

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    Explore related topics: russia, world, election, president, vladimir-putin, featured
  • 1
    Mar
    2012
    6:20am, EST

    Could Vladimir Putin be in power until 2024? 10 key questions about Russia's elections

    Reuters

    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, Communist party leader Gennady Zyuganov, tycoon and independent candidate Mikhail Prokhorov, Nationalist Liberal Democratic Party leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky and A Just Russia party leader Sergey Mironov will battle for the country's presidency on Sunday.

    More than 100 million Russians will go to the polls on Sunday to elect a president who will be in office for the next six years. Msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson examines the potential outcomes -- and what's at stake.

    What do the polls suggest will happen?

    Most polls indicate it will be an outright victory for Vladimir Putin, the current prime minister and former president who has made a deal with his ally Dmitry Medvedev, the former prime minister and current president. Despite initial public outrage over their job swap, Putin is consistently polling at around 50 per cent – well ahead of the fragmented opposition.

    And even if voters do not endorse Putin, his victory is likely to be assured with the help of regional officials loyal to his United Russia party. Having extended the presidential term of office from four to six years, Putin would remain in charge until 2018 – or 2024, if he won a second term. By then, Putin would have chalked up 24 years in power out of the 33 years since the collapse of Communism thanks to his previous terms as president and prime minister.


    If the outcome is such a certainty, why should the U.S. and other Western countries care?

    Experts agree the U.S. will find Russia harder to deal with on Putin’s return. On Wednesday, British think tank Chatham House warned that “Russia’s stability is at increased risk” due to Putin's determination to stay in power. “The overriding objective of Vladimir Putin and his team is to preserve the narrow and personalized ruling system that they have built over the past 12 years,” it said in a report. “Real change, necessarily involving accountability and devolution of power, would disrupt the system. But without real change, Russia cannot develop as effectively as it could, and the Putin system is vulnerable to shock.”

    PhotoBlog from Dec. 2011: Russians vote in election test for Putin

    Opposition leaders believe Russia at a crossroads in this election, according to NBC News correspondent Jim Maceda.

    “The choice is stark: six, perhaps 12, more years of an authoritative regime that is belligerent to critics ... and which sees the U.S. and its allies as Cold War rivals -- or a new, more democratic Russia that respects its neighbors and no longer snubs the West,” he said.

    With less than a week until Russia's presidential elections, protesters of Vladimir Putin have one single message: "Putin, go away." Rock Center's Harry Smith reports.

    “The feeling is that a President Putin will instinctively shrink from, rather than encourage, co-operation with the West on a range of issues including Iran and Syria, so there’s a lot at stake for the U.S. in this election," added Maceda, who has reported on the country since the days of the Soviet Union.

    Although Putin enjoys strong domestic popularity, especially in rural Russia, dissatisfaction with his seemingly invincible regime has resulted in unprecedented public protests, with thousands joining recent marches in central Moscow that would have been unthinkable only a few months ago.

    What happens if Putin doesn't do as well as the polls suggest? 

    If no candidate receives more than 50 per cent of the total votes cast, a second round run-off between the top two contenders will be held within 15 days, according to the country's electoral rules.

    Russians rally for Putin -- and 2 days off work

    Who are the opposition?

    Putin’s United Russia is opposed by long-standing Communist rival Gennady Zyuganov and Sergey Mironov of A Just Russia. Two other candidates will liven up the contest. The first is Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the ultra-nationalist Liberal Democratic Party candidate who once suggested retaking Alaska from the U.S. His populist remarks have repeatedly landed him in trouble. The second is Mikhail Prokhorov, the 6’ 9” international playboy who is the multi-billionaire owner of the New Jersey Nets and business partner of rap star Jay-Z.

    Meet the NBA tycoon who could be president of Russia

    Eleven other candidates were summarily rejected by Russia’s Central Elections Committee as ineligible for reasons ranging from paperwork errors to not having the necessary two million verifiable signatures of support.

    Is Prokhorov wasting his time?

    “On paper, the ‘billionaire bachelor’ should probably pack it in and focus on his day job and the back half of the NBA season,” said Maceda. “But guess who is the only candidate surging in the polls? Prokhorov was hovering around one per cent when he launched his campaign in December, now he’s scraping 10 per cent.”

    Could his pro-business platform resonate with Russians sick of endemic corruption and bribery?  “He is learning to connect with ordinary Russians,” said Maceda. “His performance of a Russian rap tune has gone viral on the web and, who knows, maybe if this goes into a second round and enough voters who want neither Putin not Zyuganov rally round the new face, anything could happen.”

    But would communists really switch support from Zyuganov to back the world’s 32nd richest man in the event of a second round? “There is no evidence that suggests that is likely,” said Professor Richard Rose, director of the Centre for the Study of Public Policy at Glasgow'sUniversity of Strathclyde and co-author of the "Popular Support for an Undemocratic Regime."

    Can the results be trusted anyway?

    “Vote fraud was widespread in December’s parliamentary elections and it is likely to be a factor again,” said James Nixey, an expert on Russia with Chatham House and a co-author of Wednesday’s report.  “It is likely a Putin victory will be solidified through fraud before and after, rather than on polling day itself.”

    A Wall Street Journal analysis of December’s Duma election results showed United Russia party captured a high share of voters in districts where turnout was well above the national average, suggesting ballot-stuffing.

    But although the issue has angered many voters, Russians seem resigned to the problem. “Russians are not particularly concerned with the process,” said Rose. “They do not view the elections in the same way an independent observer might.”

    What issues have featured in the campaign?

    “Wages and economic prosperity are what matter most,” said Nixey. “There has also been a patriotic narrative from Putin, which strikes a chord with voters.”

    After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, there were wider questions about what sort of society could be created and how it should be structured. “Now, most educated professionals spend their time bogged down in how to make schools and hospitals work for the best,” said Rose, adding that there was not widespread demand for political upheaval.

    A crowd of over 100,000 people brave bitter-cold conditions in Moscow to push for free and fair presidential elections. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.

    Putin succeeded in imposing some kind of order in the post-Soviet Russia he inherited from the unpredictable Boris Yeltsin. He won a power struggle with the country’s new super-rich oligarchs -- tackling them with the ruthlessness learned during his time working for the KGB -- and used media stunts such as bare-chested horseback riding in order to maintain his appeal to ordinary Russians.

    Given Putin’s poll lead,  the opposition is not focused on whether Putin wins, but how. “This election is about the first round,” said Maceda. “If other candidates do better than expected and Putin is forced into a second round, the opposition will see it as a major victory and the beginning of the end for Putin.”

    But a decisive, unchallenged victory for Putin could see the opposition neutered until the next election cycle in six years’ time, he added.

    So what, if anything, might change?

    Putin has pledged more than $160 billion in campaign promises, Maceda said, so some Russians will reap the benefits of his determination to stay in office.

    Further protests could also draw concessions, particularly to the country’s frustrated middle classes. “The very fact that there have been protests shows that there is the sense of an ending around Putin’s regime, that it is aware of its own mortality,” said Nixey.

    However, there is no wider expectation of reform. Data from the country’s Levada Center polling organization shows four out of five Russians don’t believe elections make any difference to national affairs.

    A laidback Yankee in trouble in Putin's court

    Is social media playing a role?

    As in the Arab Spring, protesters have used Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to get their message across. In December, video footage and pictures that appeared to show election officials rigging ballots in favor of United Russia were widely shared online, sparking a furious backlash against Medvedev.

    The president -- a keen user of social media with 759,000 Twitter followers of his Russian language account and 144,000 in English -- saw thousands of negative comments posted on his official Facebook page by internet users accusing him of burying the issue of election fraud by holding an internal inquiry.

    Meanwhile, Russia’s independent elections monitor, Golos, has created an interactive map for voters to upload video and photographs of any election violations on Sunday directly from their mobile phones. The organization, funded largely by Western governments, has been targeted by a documentary on state-controlled television accusing it of serving American interests, according to a New York Times report.

    Plot to kill Putin foiled, pro-government TV channel reports

    Will there be violence?

    “With security forces being full of young guys carrying machine guns, there is always the fear that these protests could turn nasty,” said Nixey, whose report suggests a "next wave of protest in the Soviet-era provincial cities, fuelled by social and economic discontent, is inevitable" However, he added: “If I had to predict whether there would be serious public disorder I would guess not. The country is generally more secure than those caught up in the Arab Spring.”

    Rose added: “The fragmented opposition would first need to rally around one particular issue, and then use that to create some kind of significant embarrassment for Putin. That doesn’t appear a realistic prospect at the moment.”

    NBC News' Jim Maceda contributed to this report. Follow Alastair Jamieson on Twitter.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    156 comments

    The average Russian seems to be no more informed than the average American! I guess there are some things we both have in common.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: russia, elections, europe, president, putin, featured, medvedev, prokhorov
  • 25
    Feb
    2012
    2:56am, EST

    Deadly car bomb hits outside Yemen presidential palace hours after inauguration

    Reuters

    People inspect the scene of a suicide car bomb outside the presidential palace in the southern Yemeni city of Mukalla on Saturday.

    By msnbc.com news services

    Updated at 11:18 a.m. ET: SANAA, Yemen -- A suicide car bomb claimed by al-Qaida killed at least 26 people outside a presidential palace in southern Yemen Saturday, hours after Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi was sworn as Yemen's new president with the job of bringing stability to an increasingly chaotic nation.

    The car was driven at a palace in the port city of Mukalla, Yemen's fourth-largest city, far from the capital Sanaa where Hadi was sworn in. Dozens were injured, and the governor of Hadramout province said most of the dead were members of the national army, the Republican Guard.

    "Al-Qaida is responsible for the suicide bombing in Mukalla in retaliation for the Republican Guard's crimes," an al-Qaida source told Reuters. Sanaa, scene of much fighting in recent months between factions of the army supporting protesters and units loyal to Saleh, was relatively quiet, however.


    After taking the oath, Hadi had singled out al-Qaida, whose active Arabian Peninsula branch is based in Yemen, as a top priority for his new administration: "Continuing the war against al-Qaida is a national and religious duty."

    The former army general was elected as the sole candidate to replace Ali Abdullah Saleh, who had led Yemen for three decades but was pushed out by months of street protests sparked by the Arab Spring, and supervise a transition to democracy.

    While the street protests and bouts of bloody repression by security forces have subsided, Yemen remains in turmoil from mass poverty, unemployment and corruption, rebellions in the north and south, and the threat from al-Qaida.

    Saudi Arabia and the United States long saw Saleh as the main bulwark against al-Qaida in Yemen, which sits on one of the world's main oil shipping routes, but threw their weight behind a power transfer deal as protests against him grew.

    Hadi said in a speech that Yemen must draw a line under a year of protests and violence and turn its attention to economic problems and the job of returning those displaced by the crisis to their homes.

    Jamal Benomar, U.N. envoy to Yemen, said: "Yemenis want an end to the crisis, and to turn a new page. Now it's time to rebuild, for consensus and concord ... and to bring people into an inclusive political process."

    The U.S. ambassador to Yemen, Gerald Feierstein, said: "We are seeing the beginning of a process that I believe will deliver great results over the next two years."

    Hadi now has the job of overseeing a two-year political transition that foresees parliamentary elections, a new constitution and a restructuring of the military, in which Saleh's son and nephew still hold power.

    "I stand here at a historic moment ... I look to the Yemeni people and give them thanks. The crisis reached every city and village and house, but Yemen will continue to go forward," Hadi said.

    If we don't deal with challenges practically, then chaos will reign."

    Hadi's inauguration ceremony is scheduled for Monday. Saleh, who returned to Yemen early Saturday after seeking treatment in the United States for injuries suffered in an assassination attempt last year, is due to attend.

    After Hadi's speech, protesters in the southern city of Aden clashed with security forces, killing one soldier, a local security official said. Two soldiers and two protesters were injured, medics added.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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    47 comments

    Hopefully we don't see Obama over there in a few days, apologizing and bowing to him.

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  • 23
    Feb
    2012
    5:05am, EST

    Russians rally for Vladimir Putin -- and 2 days off work

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 10:13 a.m. ET: MOSCOW -- Thousands of people marched in Moscow under Russian flags, balloons and banners on Thursday to back Vladimir Putin's bid to return to the presidency and counter opposition protests that have challenged his authority.

    Putin is running for a third term as president in an election on March 4. The 59-year-old is seen as certain to win, but is facing a strong challenge to his authority from a protest movement that has drawn large crowds to its rallies in Moscow.


    The Associated Press reported that most of Thursday's participants appeared to be workers paid by or dependent on the state, including teachers, municipal workers and employees of state companies.

    $67 payment offered
    Some people at the rally told reporters they were promised two days off in return for attending. Many were reluctant to explain why they came, The AP reported.

    "I came here with friends. They said they would pay each of us 2,000 roubles ($67)," said a 21-year-old man who gave his name only as Alexander. He and his friends were brought into Moscow by bus from just outside the city.

    Putin's campaign team, which portrays him as a strong leader and guarantor of stability, has failed to quell reports that many of the people at pro-Putin rallies are paid or coerced into attending by employers and trade unions.

    Motorists protest against Putin in Moscow's streets

    Wearing warm hats, scarves and coats on a chilly national holiday, the participants started marching along the banks of the Moscow River behind a long blue banner declaring: "Our vote for Putin."

    The atmosphere was festive on Defender of the Fatherland Day, a holiday which honors the armed forces.

    Mikhail Voskresensky / Reuters

    Thousands of people attended a march backing Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia, on Thursday. Russians will go to the polls on March 4.

    The AFP news service estimated that 30,000 people attended the rally. However, the BBC cited Moscow police as putting the total at 130,000.

    Police were out in force because the opposition communists and nationalists planned rallies in other parts of the capital.

    A laid-back Yankee in trouble in Putin's court

    The communists and nationalists also staged small rallies in several other cities across the vast country of more than 140 million people.

    'Join us'
    Putin has tried to discredit the protesters by accusing their leaders of being paid agents of the United States working to weaken Russia. His references on Thursday were more subtle as he called on all Russians who "cherish, care about and believe in" their motherland to unite.

    "We ask everyone not to look abroad, not to run to the other side and not to deceive your motherland, but to join us," he said from a makeshift stage in a soccer stadium as a light snow fell on his bare head.

    But he also warned the West: "We won't allow anyone to meddle in our affairs or impose their will upon us, because we have a will of our own."

    If Putin, a former KGB officer, wins the election, he will extend his 12-year rule for another six years. Putin was president from 2000 until 2008, when he was barred by the constitution from running for a third successive term, but has remained dominant as prime minister.

    The latest opinion poll this week showed he would win more than 50 percent of the votes on March 4, enough to avoid a second-round runoff. His rivals include nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, communist Gennady Zyuganov and businessman Mikhail Prokhorov, who owns the New Jersey Nets.

    Meet the NBA tycoon who wants to be Russia's president

    Putin says many people want him to return to the presidency; when he last held the office, Russians enjoyed an economic boom on the back of a surge in the price of oil, Russia's main export commodity.

    After initially insulting the protesters who have taken part in opposition rallies sparked by allegations of fraud in a parliamentary election won by his party on Dec. 4, Putin has allowed their main rallies to go ahead.

    'Frozen fury': Thousands brave icy chill to protest in Moscow

    But he has accused foreign governments of backing the opposition protesters and has met none of their main demands, including a rerun of December's election, the release of people the opposition call political prisoners and far-reaching political reforms.

    The next opposition protest in Moscow is planned for Sunday.

    If Putin wins two more terms, he could stay in power until 2024. The opposition protesters say a growing number of Russians feel they have no say in the way Russia is run and that it is bad for any country to be led by one person for so long.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    The Associated Press, Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    65 comments

    Russian people bought and paid for for 67 dollars? Maybe Russia is not ready for freedom. From communist country to a Dictator. Wake up Russia!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: russia, elections, europe, president, protest, putin, moscow, featured
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