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  • 16
    May
    2013
    9:09pm, EDT

    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.


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    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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  • 7
    May
    2013
    8:44am, EDT

    Syria set to dominate talks between Kerry and Russia's Putin

    Mladen Antonov / AFP - Getty Images

    Secretary of State John Kerry arrives at Moscow's Vnukovo Airport on Tuesday in his first trip to Russia since taking office. The civil war in Syria will likely dominate his discussions with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Moscow on Tuesday to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin for discussions that will include what may be considered problem number one: what to do about the civil war in Syria.

    Russia has traditionally been a backer of Syrian President Bashar Assad, while the U.S. has sided with the rebel forces trying to overthrow him, so the issue is certain to be prominent.

    A senior State Department official on Monday conveyed a sense of urgency in gaining Russia’s cooperation on Syria, noting that despite Moscow’s formal commitment to a Geneva agreement calling for a political transition in the country, it has done little to work toward that goal.

    Syria has become a battleground between the Shiites (the Syrian government allied with Hezbollah and Iran) and the Sunni powers, comprised of the Syrian rebels, Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    “We certainly want to try to make another stab at it, to make another effort at it, because events on the ground have become steadily worse,” the official said. “The casualty figures are mounting, the rate of killing has gone up, and ... the situation is adding to instability in the region.”

    In a briefing Monday, White House spokesman Jay Carney said the administration was "working with the Russians" and was hopeful that Putin would continue a pattern of backing away from support of Assad.

    In February, Russian and U.S. foreign ministers met with opposition coalition leader Mouaz Alkhatib in Munich. Later that month, however, the Syrian National Coalition turned down invitations to meet with diplomats in Washington and Moscow, citing Russia’s support of Assad.

    Two months earlier, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said he had urged a Syrian counterpart to meet with opposition leaders so they could discuss a way to end the brutal civil war, which has killed more than 70,000 people in two years, according to United Nations figures.

    And in December, Putin said in a nationally broadcast news conference that “we are not concerned about the fate of Assad’s regime,” seemingly turning his back on a traditional ally.

    Still, Russia has repeatedly come under fire from the United States for blocking U.N. Security Council resolutions drawn up to put more pressure on Assad.

    “We have been clear in the past about our disappointment with Russia over their opposition to resolutions at the Security Council with regards to this matter, but this is an ongoing conversation,” Carney said Monday.

    Washington’s hope lies not only in meetings with Russian leaders but in the increasing international outrage over what is perceived to be Assad’s cruel treatment of Syrians, Carney said.

    “We have seen over the course of weeks and months an escalation by Assad of the brutality that is perpetuating on his own people, and we have consistently in our conversations with the Russians and others pointed clearly to Assad’s behavior as proof that further support for that regime is not in the interest of the Syrian people or in the interest of the countries that have in the past supported Assad. “We make that case repeatedly with the Russian government and others, and I’m sure we will continue to do that.”

    Related:

    • Analysis: Putin's crackdown guts opposition movement
    • US official: Syrian rebels not using chemical weapons
    • Full Syria coverage from NBC News

    13 comments

    Syria? None of our business: and we are broke, too. Syria has no oil, the rebels can't pay us back once they are in office as Iraq and Libya are doing (paying us for the cost with their oil).3+

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  • 24
    Apr
    2013
    6:54am, EDT

    Russia launches 'unprecedented' crackdown, rights group warns

    Yuri Kadobnov / AFP - Getty Images file

    A woman holds a leaflet, reading "For human rights" and featuring a picture of Russian protest leader Alexei Navalny, during an opposition rally in Moscow on April 17.

    By Ian Johnston and Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    Vladimir Putin's Russia has launched an "unprecedented" crackdown on political activists and civil society groups, Human Rights Watch alleged in a report released Wednesday.

    The New York-based group’s report described a "nationwide campaign" of harassment and intimidation by the former KGB officer's government.

    It came on the day Putin critic Alexei Navalny urged a court to throw out what he said were trumped-up charges intended to silence him. It also comes weeks after the State Department cataloged a series of human concerns in Russia, including restrictions to harsh fines for unsanctioned political meetings, electoral fraud and the detention and trial of citizens without due process.

    The HRW report, "Laws of Attrition: The Crackdown on Russia’s Civil Society after Putin’s Return to the Presidency," said:

    • Putin’s government has sought to portray critics as "clandestine enemies" 
    • a number of political activists have been jailed 
    • and a series of restrictive laws, including one against treason that could criminalize international human rights campaigners and others that impose "draconian limits on association with foreigners," have been passed.

    It also said that hundreds of organizations had been subjected to "intrusive" inspections about a raft of matters such as tax affairs, fire safety and air quality.

    In one case, the report said a group was asked for chest X-rays of its staff to ensure they did not have tuberculosis. In another, officials demanded copies of speeches made at a group's meetings.

    "Taken together, the laws and government actions described in this report violate Russia’s international legal obligations to protect freedom of association, expression, and assembly and threaten the viability of Russia’s vibrant civil society," the report said.

    Nikolay Petrov, scholar-in-residence at the Carnegie Moscow Center think tank, echoed the HRW findings, saying the democratic climate in Russia has got “much worse” over the past year.

    “At first, these new laws were portrayed as something that would only be used as a threat, not a tool that would actually be used,” he said. “Now we are seeing these laws used a lot to target [non-profit] organizations and protests.

    “Huge numbers of law enforcement officers are now involved” in the clampdown against political opponents and rights groups, he added.

    Sergei Chirikov / EPA file

    Russian police officers make their way through a crowd to detain opposition activists in Moscow last month.

    “It is important for all democracies to be aware of what is going on in Russia.”

    The HRW report cited two cases as "further examples of Russia’s waning commitment to its international human rights obligations": The two-year prison sentences given to two members of feminist punk band Pussy Riot for a political stunt in a Moscow cathedral and the fate of Leonid Razvozzhaev, a political activist accused of organizing a riot who attempted to claim asylum in neighboring Ukraine.

    Razvozzhaev went missing in Ukraine after stepping outside the office of a partner organization of the United Nation's High Commissioner for Refugees "to take a break during an asylum interview."

    "Several days later he reappeared in custody in Russia. Razvozzhaev appears to have been forcibly disappeared and was forced to sign a confession under duress while in incommunicado detention. Razvozzhaev is in custody awaiting trial in Russia," the report said.

    In response to the State Department comments earlier this month, Russia’s foreign ministry issued a statement accusing the United States of politicizing human rights issues, according to Reuters.

    "Americans prefer not to recall their own record (of violations)," the statement said, adding that Washington has recently resorted to disproportionate use of force in Iraq and Afghanistan, causing civilian casualties, Reuters said.

    On Wednesday, a court in the industrial city of Kirov adjourned to consider Navalny’s request to throw out charges that he stole $500,000 from a state-run timber firm, The Associated Press reported.

    The most prominent opposition leader to be tried in post-Soviet Russia, Navalny has suggested Putin ordered the charges trial to stop his criticism of "swindlers and thieves" in government and sideline him as a potential presidential rival.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related: 

    Full Russia coverage from NBC News

    198 comments

    This is Obama's buddy, Obama only wishes he could do this stuff, Remember what he told Putin when he didn't know the mic. could hear him whisper to Putin

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    Explore related topics: human-rights, russia, europe, world, democracy, putin, featured, hrw, alexei-navalny
  • 20
    Apr
    2013
    6:02am, EDT

    Kremlin: Russia, US to step up counter-terrorism cooperation

    Mikhail Klimentiev / RIA NOVOSTI POOL

    The White House said President Barack Obama has thanked President Vladimir Putin (above) for Russia's close cooperation on counter-terrorism after the Boston bombings, which U.S. officials suspect was carried out by two ethnic Chechens who once lived in Russia.

    By Reuters

    MOSCOW - The Russian and U.S. presidents have agreed by telephone to increase cooperation on counter-terrorism following the Boston Marathon bombings, the Kremlin said on Saturday. 

    The White House said President Barack Obama had thanked President Vladimir Putin for Russia's close cooperation on counter-terrorism after the bombing, which U.S. officials suspect was carried out by two ethnic Chechens who once lived in Russia. 

    "President Putin expressed his condolences on behalf of the Russian people for the tragic loss of life in Boston," the White House said in a statement. 

    It said Obama had praised cooperation with Russia on counter-terrorism, including after Monday's bombing. The Kremlin appeared to go further, saying the two leaders had agreed they should now step up their work together in this field. 

    "Both sides underlined their interest in deepening the close cooperation of the Russian and U.S. special services in the fight against international terrorism," it said, but gave no details. 

    Putin has not commented on the identity of the two suspects, ethnic Chechen brothers who moved to the United States more than a decade ago after briefly living in Russia's volatile southern region of Dagestan. 

    Tamerlan Tsarnaev was shot dead by police and his brother Dzhokhar was captured after a manhunt. 

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Friday Putin had repeatedly made clear that Russia condemned all acts of terror, regardless of who carried them out. 

    Related:

    Chechen insurgents deny any link to marathon bombing

    What's next: The interrogation of the Boston bombing suspect

    Parents of Boston Marathon bombing suspects say their children were framed

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    132 comments

    It is understandable that Russia and the U.S. get together for anti-terrorism talks. Russia (USSR) alienated much of the Islam world with their Afghanistan policies and Bush did the same in Iraq.

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  • 12
    Apr
    2013
    8:57pm, EDT

    US publishes list of 18 alleged human rights abusers in Russia

    By Susan Cornwell, Reuters

    The Obama administration on Friday designated 18 people under a U.S. law requiring a list of alleged human rights abusers in Russia, in a move that could cause more friction in U.S. ties with Moscow.


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    The list includes 16 people directly related to the case of Russian whistleblower Sergei Magnitsky, who died in his jail cell in 2009, as well as two others, a senior State Department official said on condition of anonymity. Those named on the list will be subject to visa bans and asset freezes in the United States under a law passed by Congress last year.

    One U.S. lawmaker said the list was "timid" with "significant omissions," while a senior Russian lawmaker said he thought President Barack Obama had done the minimum possible under the law so as not to worsen ties with Moscow.

    U.S.-Russia relations are strained by what critics say is a crackdown on dissent in Russia under President Vladimir Putin, and disputes over security issues such as the war in Syria, which is a Russian ally.


    "The appearance of any lists will doubtless have a very negative effect on bilateral Russian-American relations," Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said in Siberia earlier on Friday. Peskov could not be reached for comment once the names on the list were known.

    But Alexei Pushkov, the head of the State Duma's international affairs committee, said the United States drew up a "minimal" list.

    "The U.S. presidential administration decided not to take the path of aggravating a political crisis with Moscow," Pushkov was quoted as saying by Interfax after the list was released.

    The list was published three days before Obama's national security adviser, Tom Donilon, is due in Moscow for talks that Russia said would include U.S. missile defense plans.

    The names released by the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control included several officials who worked in the Russian Interior Ministry, and others who worked in courts, prosecutors' or tax offices.

    Also listed was Kazbek Dukuzov, one of two natives of the Chechnya region who were tried for the 2004 killing in Moscow of American journalist Paul Klebnikov. Both were acquitted in 2006.

    Not listed was a close Putin ally whom some human rights advocates wanted to see named - Alexander Bastrykin, who heads Russia's equivalent of the FBI. He has said there is no evidence Magnitsky death was connected with actions by officials.

    Putin has said that Magnitsky's death at age 37 was caused by heart failure. But the Kremlin's own human rights council has aired suspicions that Magnitsky was beaten to death. His death spooked investors and tarnished Russia's image abroad.

    Congress passed the Magnitsky Act in December as part of a broader bill to expand U.S. trade with Russia. The Obama administration was never keen on the Magnitsky provisions, but the president signed the bill into law in December.

    The law requires an initial list by Saturday of people linked to the Magnitsky case or other alleged "gross violations of internationally-recognized human rights" in Russia.

    Russia considers the Magnitsky Act outside interference in its affairs, and warns it may respond by issuing a list of alleged U.S. human rights abusers. Moscow has already retaliated by outlawing adoptions of Russian children by American couples.

    'Significant omissions'
    Democratic Rep. James McGovern, one of the sponsors of the Magnitsky Act, called the list "timid" with "significant omissions." Late last month, McGovern sent the White House over 230 names of people he said could potentially be included.

    Not on the list but named in the Magnitsky Act itself for "wrongdoing" is Ramzan Kadyrov, the Kremlin-backed leader of Russia's Chechnya region.

    Kadyrov has not been linked to the Magnitsky case, but the U.S. State Department has noted allegations of his involvement in several killings, including that of human rights worker Natalia Estemirova. Kadyrov has denied involvement.

    McGovern said in a statement he was told by the administration that the investigation was continuing and more names would be added as new evidence came to light.

    The senior State Department official denied that political or diplomatic concerns were a factor in drawing up the list.

    "I've learned not to try to take action based on what you think the Russian reaction might be. It's better to do what's in the law and what's right and what reflects American interests and American values on human rights, and then you let the chips fall where they may," the official said. "We played this one straight. We haven't tried to game it."

    Russia expert Matt Rojansky of the Carnegie Endowment think tank said, "It makes a lot of sense that the administration would not want to deepen the tension in relations" on the eve of the Donilon trip to Moscow. Rojansky said Donilon's visit was expected to include discussions of a possible Obama-Putin meeting at a gathering of the G-8 in Northern Ireland in June.

    Rojansky noted there was also a classified annex to the list, which might include more politically sensitive names.

    But Republican Sen. John McCain, who presumably had seen the classified annex, said in a statement about the classified part, "Even that list is inadequate."

    Magnitsky worked for the investment fund Hermitage Capital Management in Moscow and was arrested on tax fraud charges shortly after he leveled similar accusations against Russian state officials in 2008.

    Magnitsky is now being tried posthumously for tax evasion in Moscow.

    The U.S. list included a number of people U.S. lawmakers and rights activists have urged be listed because of alleged links to the jailing of Magnitsky or a cover-up over his death.

    Among them were Oleg Silchenko, a senior investigator at the federal Interior Ministry, who was allegedly in charge of the investigation into Magnitsky and ordered his detention.

    Also named was Pavel Karpov, a senior investigator in the Interior Ministry at the time of the 2007 police raids on Hermitage Capital, and Artyom Kuznetsov, another Interior Ministry official who allegedly took part in the police raids.

    Karpov, who has initiated a libel case against William Browder, the chief of Hermitage Capital, denied the accusations.

    "I am expecting soon the decision from the high court of London which will confirm the falsehood of the accusation" Karpov told Interfax.

    The list also included Olga Stepanova, an official from the Moscow Tax Office that authorized part of a $230 million tax refund that Magnitsky had told officials was suspect.

    Another name on the list was Yelena Stashina, a judge who allegedly prolonged Magnitsky's detention, and Andrey Pechegin, who worked in the general prosecutor's office and allegedly denied complaints from Magnitsky about his treatment.

    In addition to Dukuzov, the other name unrelated to the Magnitsky case was Lecha Bogatyrov, who has been implicated in the killing of Umar Israilov, a former bodyguard of the Russian Chechen leader Kadyrov. Israilov was shot to death in Vienna in 2009 after turning against Kadyrov. Bogatyrov reportedly escaped arrest and returned to Russia.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    33 comments

    The US should look at itself and improve human rights here first. you know? all those brutality against minorities on the regular basis!

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  • Updated
    25
    Mar
    2013
    7:46pm, EDT

    Russian tycoon Berezovsky died from hanging, UK police say

    Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a prominent Russian opposition figure, was found dead at his home near London on Saturday. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    Matthew Lloyd / Matthew Lloyd / Getty Images

    An exterior view of the home of Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky after he was found dead on Saturday in Ascot, England.

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, who was found dead in country estate south of London over the weekend, died of hanging, Thames Valley Police reported on Monday.

    A British pathologist who carried out the exam on the body of the 67-year-old Russian opposition figure determined that the “cause of death is consistent with hanging,” police said in a statement.

    “The pathologist has found nothing to indicate a violent struggle,” the statement said.


    More tests were planned on the body, including toxicology exams to determine what substances were in his system. Those results won’t likely be known for several weeks, according to police.

    In addition, police said crime scene investigators would continue combing over Berezovsky’s property in Ascot for several days.


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    Police also noted that, though Berezovsky has been named, the formal identification process would not be completed until Tuesday.

    Earlier police said the area around the estate would remain sealed off "until Wednesday or Thursday in order to protect the scene." An earlier search for evidence of radiation or chemicals returned up negative.

    Berezovsky made his fortune selling luxury cars and later founded Moscow’s first independent television station in the tumultuous times after Russia privatized state assets in the 1990s.

    He helped orchestrate the re-election of Boris Yeltsin in 1996 and also played a role in Vladimir Putin's rise to power. Berezovsky, however, fell out of favor when Putin became president in 2000 — and became one of the strongman’s critics. 

    He was granted political asylum in Britain in 2003.

    Related:

    Russian tycoon's mysterious death: Home to be sealed off for days

    This story was originally published on Mon Mar 25, 2013 7:46 PM EDT

    62 comments

    "fell out of favor", oh come on, we all know the KGB had something to do with this. Fell out of favor with Putin, and Putin had him done in. What, do you think people are stupid???

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  • Updated
    25
    Mar
    2013
    7:23am, EDT

    Russian tycoon's mysterious death: Home to be sealed off for days

    Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a prominent Russian opposition figure, was found dead at his home near London on Saturday. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    LONDON - A cordon will surround the U.K. home of exiled Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky until at least Wednesday, while detectives await the initial results of autopsy into his unexplained death.

    The area will remained sealed off "until Wednesday or Thursday in order to protect the scene,” a spokesman for Thames Valley Police said Monday. An earlier search for evidence of radiation or chemicals returned a negative result.

    Government pathologists were due to begin a post-mortem Monday afternoon on the 67-year-old, whose body was found in the locked bathroom of his large house in rural Berkshire, about 25 miles west of London. It was not clear when the initial results would be available to police.

    "It would be wrong to speculate on the cause of death until the post-mortem has been carried out," Detective Chief Inspector Kevin Brown said in a statement late Sunday. "We do not have any evidence at this stage to suggest third-party involvement."

    However, his death has raised suspicion in Britain where memories linger of the murder of Berezovsky's friend, Alexander Litvinenko, a former Russian spy poisoned with radioactive material in London in 2006.

    Like Litvinenko, Berezovsky had become an enemy of Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin and his suspicious death caused a major diplomatic rift between London and Moscow.

    'Many enemies'
    His death on Saturday makes him the latest in a line of former Soviet residents to have met an untimely end in Britain.

    Litvinenko’s wife, Marina, told the U.K.’s Daily Telegraph that her friend Berezovsky had "many enemies" and that it was "not likely" he that he had committed suicide.

    Her lawyer last month accused Britain and Russia of colluding to try to shut down an inquiry into his death for the sake of lucrative trade deals.

    Matthew Lloyd / Getty Images

    The home of Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky in Sunningdale, England.

    Berezovsky accumulated his wealth in the early 1990s, when Russia's privatization of state assets turned chaotic. He orchestrated the re-election of Boris Yeltsin in 1996 and played a role in Putin's rise to prominence, but he fell out of favor with the latter after Putin became president of Russia in 2000. 

    He suffered a huge financial blow in 2011 after agreeing one of Britain's biggest-ever divorce settlements – reportedly as much as $100m - with his former wife, Galina.

    Reuters reported that Berezovsky was also under pressure after losing a $6 billion court case to Chelsea Football Club owner Roman Abramovich, a former business partner he sued in one of the most expensive cases in British legal history.

    "He had no money, he had lost it all. He was unbelievably depressed," Tim Bell, a public relations executive who was one of his closest British advisers, told the Sunday Times newspaper. "It's all very sad."

    Meanwhile, Putin's spokesman said Berezovsky, seen by Moscow as a criminal who should stand trial for fraud and tax evasion, had written to Putin asking for forgiveness - a suggestion dismissed by one of the oligarch's friends, Reuters said.

    "Berezovsky sent Vladimir Putin a letter he wrote personally, in which he acknowledged that he had made many mistakes, asked Putin's forgiveness for these mistakes and appealed to Putin to help him return to his homeland," said Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

    A friend of Berezovsky's in London, Andrei Sidelnikov, told Reuters the idea that the businessman would write a letter to Putin was "complete nonsense".

    "He was a sane person and he understood that he would never be able to return under Putin's regime, for political reasons," Sidelnikov said.

    Related:

    Full Russia coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Mon Mar 25, 2013 7:19 AM EDT

    24 comments

    With Putin in power or should I say back at the helm again it would be suspect that this man was probably murdered as an enemy of the state. So much for civilized men of Russia. The true story will never be known except to the inner circle of Russia's power group.

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    Explore related topics: russia, europe, world, spy, putin, uk, poison, featured, kgb, boris-berezovsky, updated
  • 24
    Mar
    2013
    2:02pm, EDT

    UK police: No 'third party involvement' in Russian tycoon's death

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

    By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

    British police said evidence at the home of Boris Berezovsky, an exiled Russian oligarch who was found dead near London on Saturday, does not indicate "third party involvement."


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    “It would be wrong to speculate on the cause of death until the post mortem has been carried out. We do not have evidence at this stage to suggest third party involvement,” Detective Chief Inspector Kevin Brown, Deputy Senior Investigating Officer in the case, said in a statement.

    Berezovsky, 67, amassed a mammoth fortune as an oil and automobiles magnate during Russia’s post-Soviet privatization of state assets in the early 1990s. He also accrued immense political influence, catapulting Boris Yeltsin to re-election in 1996 and brokering Vladimir Putin’s rise to prominence.

    But when Putin became president of Russia in 2000, Berezovsky became one of his harshest critics and often clashed with the Kremlin. He soon fled to Britain, where he was granted political asylum three years later.

    Police said the tycoon’s death was “unexplained” and are working to make sense of Berezovksy’s final hours.

    “The investigation team (is) building a picture of the last days of Mr. Berezovsky’s life, speaking to close friends and family to gain a better understanding of his state of mind,” said Brown.

    Authorities announced Sunday that radioactive, biological and chemical specialists sent to conduct tests gave the scene an “all clear,” The Associated Press reported.

    “Officials found nothing of concern in the property, and we are now progressing the investigation as normal,” according to the police statement.

    Heightening the intrigue is the fact that Berezovsky was a close friend of Alexander Litvinenko, a Russian dissident who was fatally and mysteriously poisoned with radioactive polonium in London in 2006.

    Berezovsky was an outspoken opponent of Putin in recent years, charging the president with dictatorial policies and domestic terrorism. Berezovsky, who survived assassination attempts – including a bombing that decapitated his driver – said he feared retributive violence after criticizing the government, according to Reuters.

    A spokesman for Putin on the Russia 24 television station said that he was not aware of the president’s reaction to the news of Berezovsky’s death, but that “news of anyone’s death, no matter what kind of person they were, cannot arouse any positive emotions.”

    NBC News’ Becky Bratu contributed to this report.

    19 comments

    What a strange statement, "no third party involved". Who was the second party??

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  • Updated
    24
    Mar
    2013
    8:15am, EDT

    Russian tycoon Berezovsky found dead in London

    Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a prominent Russian opposition figure, was found dead at his home near London on Saturday. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a prominent Russian opposition figure, was found dead at his home near London on Saturday, British officials told NBC News. He was 67.

    His death was also reported in a Facebook post by his son-in-law, Egor Schuppe. "Boris Berezovsky dead," the post read.

    Ben Stansall / AFP - Getty Images, file

    A picture dated Oct. 4, 2011 shows Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky leaving the Court of Appeal in Central London. Berezovsky, the exiled Russian oligarch and long-time opponent of the Kremlin, has died in Britain at the age of 67, his spokesman said on March 23, 2013, without giving further details.

    Police said in a statement that they were investigating "the unexplained death of a 67-year-old man, believed to be Russian national Boris Berezovsky." Officials were combing through a property in Ascot, Berkshire, which is about 25 miles west of London. 

    Officers trained in dealing with chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear threats conducted a number of searches as a precaution but found "nothing of concern in the property," according to the police statement. One road block in the area remained closed, police said.

    Police said Berezovsky's body was still in the property Saturday night, police said.

    "I would like to reassure residents that we are confident there is no risk to the wider community," Supt. Stuart Greenfield said in an earlier statement. "The property is part of a large estate so a number of roads are closed off at the moment and will remain so for the time being."

    Berezovsky accumulated his wealth in the early 1990s, when Russia's privatization of state assets turned chaotic. He orchestrated the re-election of Boris Yeltsin in 1996 and played a role in Vladimir Putin's rise to prominence, but he fell out of favor with the latter after Putin became president of Russia in 2000. 


    Berezovsky fled Russia for Britain in 2001 after criticizing Putin's government. He was granted political asylum in Britain in 2003.


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    Berezovsky was a close friend of Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko, who was fatally poisoned with radioactive polonium in London in 2006.

    Last year, a court ordered him to pay $53.3 million in legal costs to fellow Russian tycoon Roman Abramovich, the billionaire owner of Chelsea Football Club, after losing a legal battle against him. The legal and other costs of that lawsuit amounted to about $250 million.

     

    This story was originally published on Sat Mar 23, 2013 3:55 PM EDT

    170 comments

    Putin strikes again !

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  • 15
    Mar
    2013
    11:53am, EDT

    Putin awards biker buddy 'the Surgeon' with medal

    Mikhail Klimentyev / AFP - Getty Images

    Russia's President Vladimir Putin looks at the leader of Nochniye Volki (the Night Wolves) biker group, Alexander Zaldostanov, also known as Khirurg (the Surgeon), after awarding him at a meeting with members of the Military History Society in the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, on March 14.

    Mikhail Klimentyev / AFP - Getty Images

    Russia's President Vladimir Putin hands a medal to the leader of Nochniye Volki (the Night Wolves) biker group, Alexander Zaldostanov, also known as Khirurg (the Surgeon).

    Sergei Karpukhin / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Vladimir Putin, then Russian Prime Minister, rides a Harley Davidson Lehman Trike together with the leader of Nochniye Volki (the Night Wolves) biker group, Alexander Zaldostanov, also known as Khirurg (the Surgeon), during Putin's visit to Russian and Ukrainian motorbikers at their camp near Sevastopol in Ukraine's Crimea, on July 24, 2009.

    Russia's President Vladimir Putin awarded a medal to Alexander 'the Surgeon' Zaldostanov, the leader of the Nochniye Volki (Night Wolves) biker group. He presented 'the Surgeon' with the medal after meeting with the Military History Society on Thursday in Moscow. As prime minister, Putin visited the Nochniye Volki's club in 2009 before they participated in a bike show. Putin has since made public appearances with 'the Surgeon' each year, going out for rides together on their bikes.

    Related links:

    • What did Putin say? Photo sparks online speculation
    • Russian Orthodox Church apologizes for photoshopping patriarch's expensive watch
    • Russia's Putin takes to sky to lead flight of cranes

     

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    15 comments

    Did I miss something? I didn't quite catch what this guy did to deserve a medal or why they call him "the surgeon".

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    Explore related topics: russia, motorcycle, putin, vladimir-putin
  • 15
    Feb
    2013
    7:00pm, EST

    Russian nuclear bombers intercepted near Guam

     

    By Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube, NBC News

    Two Russian bombers, capable of carrying nuclear cruise missiles, circled the U.S. island of Guam in the Western Pacific this week, U.S. military officials told NBC News. U.S. Air Force F-15 jets scrambled from Andersen Air Force Base on Guam to intercept the bombers.

    According to one military official, the Russian Bear bombers remained in international airspace, the encounter between the U.S. and Russian aircraft “stayed professional” and there was no incident. The official said it’s impossible to determine whether the Russian bombers carried any nuclear weapons.


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    U.S. long-range radars and satellites tracked the two bombers as they took off from northeastern Russia and headed south on a long-range flight that required “multiple refueling.” Japan also scrambled fighter jets as the bombers passed near but did not enter Japanese airspace.

    U.S. military officials say “it’s highly unusual but not unprecedented” that Russian bombers would fly training missions in the vicinity of Guam. According to one official, “It wasn’t provocative but it certainly got our attention.” U.S. long-range B-52 bombers, also capable of carrying nuclear weapons, are based at Guam.

    Since Vladimir Putin reclaimed the Russian presidency, U.S. officials said the number of such flights in the vicinity of the Aleutian Islands and Alaska have increased, but encounters with U.S. aircraft have remained “generally very professional.”

    The two Russian Bear bombers flew near Guam at about the same time President Barack Obama delivered his State of the Union message. Military officials refused to speculate about the timing.

    The interception was first reported in the Washington Free Beacon.

    622 comments

    I think they call this "probing the enemy".

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    Explore related topics: russia, nuclear, bomber, putin, featured, guam, interception
  • 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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