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Last updated: 23 February 2012

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Russia sanctions new mass anti-Putin protest

Editorial
03:31 PM (MSK) January 26, 2012

Moscow authorities Thursday allowed a mass opposition protest on February 4 where tens of thousands are set to challenge Vladimir Putin's domination of Russia a month ahead of presidential polls.

The official permission for the rally -- which will be the third such event in the Russian capital in less than two months -- means people can take to the streets without fear of being instantly arrested.

The city hall has sanctioned a protest march south of the Moscow river mustering up to 50,000 people from noon to 3:00 pm local time (0800 to 1100 GMT), deputy Moscow mayor Alexander Gorbenko told the Interfax news agency.

"The city hall has agreed to one of the variants put forward (by the opposition) that is acceptable to both sides," he said.

The demonstration will follow mass protests on December 10 and December 24 against the conduct of parliamentary elections that mustered tens of thousands of people and showed growing discontent with the rule of Putin.

The protest will see demonstrators march from Bolshaya Yakimanka street in the south of the centre of the Russian capital to Bolotnaya Square just opposite the Kremlin walls on the other side of the Moscow river.

It will come ahead of presidential elections on March 4 where Putin is standing for a third Kremlin term after his four-year stint as prime minister, in defiance of opposition warnings he has been in power too long.

"Friends! The march has finally been sanctioned and that is wonderful," the activists behind the protest movement wrote on their Facebook page, posting a copy of the official document from the city hall.

One of the organisers of the opposition protest meeting on February 4, journalist Sergei Parkhomenko, told Interfax the arrangements were a "compromise" that would be acceptable to the opposition and the authorities.

The protest will differ from the previous mass rallies in that it will include a march, helping protestors stay moving in the coldest time of the year and also creating a vivid spectacle.

The opposition protest is set to be mirrored by mass rallies in support of Putin that are also likely to gather tens of thousands.

The Russian Trade Union Federation -- a body that groups together around 25 million workers -- is planning pro-Putin meetings "in all regional and city centres", its chief Mikhail Shmakov was quoted as saying by the website of Putin's All Russian Popular Front (ONF) rallying group.

The Vedomosti daily quoted sources in the Moscow city hall as saying the ONF -- a body set up to rally support for Putin -- was interested in holding a mass protest also on February 4 and possibly on Red Square itself.

The ONF plans to hold successive waves of pro-Putin rallies across Russia starting on February 4 and then on February 11 and 18, Vedomosti quoted a source in the group as saying.

The Russian protest movement has for the first time shown up chinks in Putin's once all-conquering popularity but the Russian strongman is still expected to win the presidential polls in the absence of strong challengers.

In the latest opinion poll to show a recovery in Putin's popularity over the New Year, the independent Levada Centre said that Putin was on course to garner 62 percent in the presidential elections.

Such a result would mean he would avoid a second round run-off against his nearest challenger, most likely the dour Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov who would poll 15 percent, according to Levada.

"AFP"


11:26 AM (MSK) February 22, 2012
The scene at a hotel conference room here could have sprung whole from a daydream by Donald Trump. Hundreds of young people milled about, buzzing with praise and admiration for a billionaire who decided to run for president.

12:50 PM (MSK) February 21, 2012
U.N. nuclear inspectors starting a two-day visit to Tehran on Monday sought to meet Iranian nuclear scientists and visit a key military facility as they try to gauge allegations that Iran is pushing toward making an atomic weapon.

11:52 AM (MSK) February 20, 2012
Russian stocks rose to a six-month high as oil traded at its strongest level in six weeks on signs an improving U.S. economy will support fuel demand.

11:27 AM (MSK) February 20, 2012
In one part of the United Nations complex this week, the United States was inveighing against China and Russia for its defense of the Syrian regime. In another, it was much more quietly siding with those governments. The issue was the groundrules for the planned July conference to draft a global arms trade treaty. The key question was whether that conference would run by consensus, a process that effectively awards every participant a veto. Lou Charbonneau of Reuters reported on the debate.

11:15 AM (MSK) February 20, 2012
The U.N. General Assembly told the Syrian government to stop shooting unarmed protestors and isolated its key supporter, Russia, in adopting a resolution that had at least 137 "yes "votes and only 12 against.

11:00 AM (MSK) February 20, 2012
President Obama is working to realize the leftist dream of unilateral nuclear disarmament. This will leave the United States pitifully weak and create conditions for catastrophic deterrence failure.

11:32 AM (MSK) February 16, 2012
U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta tried to defuse concerns in Congress on Wednesday about potential cuts to America's nuclear arsenal, as details emerged about options under consideration that include an 80 percent reduction in the number of warheads.

11:26 AM (MSK) February 16, 2012

Russia and Iran are continuing to send arms to the Syrian regime that can be used against protesters, a top State Department official said today.

"Iran is resupplying Syria and through Syria has supplied weapons to Hezbollah," said Tom Countryman, the assistant secretary of state for international security and nonproliferation, at a Wednesday morning breakfast meeting of the Defense Writers Group in Washington.


04:25 PM (MSK) February 14, 2012
Russian officials pledged Monday to "study" a new proposal by the Arab League  that would create a joint UN  peacekeeping force for strife-torn Syria, but  Moscow appears to be hardening its position against any outside interference in Syria's increasingly civil-warlike turmoil.

04:11 PM (MSK) February 14, 2012
Britain and Russia said a cease-fire was needed in Syria before a peacekeeping force could be deployed there, as the United Nations accused the Assad regime of escalating the crisis, with thousands dead and tens of thousands arrested, fleeing the country and displaced internally.
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Joshua Foust
The country's ascent to the World Trade Organization is an opportunity to help U.S. businesses and continue ramping down tensions still leftover from the Cold War.
In December, Russia passed an important milestone: it was approved for  full membership  in the World Trade Organization. The decision still needs to be ratified by Moscow, but Russia's inclusion in the global community of trading partners seems all but assured. So what does this mean?
Joshua Foust
The country's ascent to the World Trade Organization is an opportunity to help U.S. businesses and continue ramping down tensions still leftover from the Cold War.
In December, Russia passed an important milestone: it was approved for  full membership  in the World Trade Organization. The decision still needs to be ratified by Moscow, but Russia's inclusion in the global community of trading partners seems all but assured. So what does this mean?
Editorial
Members of the Kremlin elite had forged two plans meant to modernize and strengthen the Russian economy for the future. The twin modernization and privatization programs were to depend largely on foreign expertise and investment, particularly investment from the Europeans, who are Russia's most important trade partners. However, the European economic crisis and political instability inside Russia have complicated matters, making investment less likely. Thus, the Kremlin is reformulating its plans to better suit the current circumstances.
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