Latest Monitor Articles
DOUBTS SURROUND CRIMEAN SPEAKER’S "ABDUCTION".
More details have been revealed about the August 24-25 abduction of the speaker of the Crimean parliament, Yevhen Suprunyuk, but no explanation has yet been offered as to the motives of the alleged assault. Suprunyuk claims the attack was politically motivated, but some Crimean parliamentarians,... MORE
RUSSIA STIFFS UKRAINE ON KEY ISSUES.
The prime ministers of Russia and Ukraine, Viktor Chernomyrdin and Pavlo Lazarenko, registered disagreements on long-unresolved issues at a meeting in Moscow yesterday. The first since the formation of the two countries' new cabinets, the meeting produced agreement only on unspecified "scientific-technological cooperation," peaceful space... MORE
ESTONIA’S PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION DEADLOCKED.
The Estonian parliament yesterday held the second and third rounds of balloting to elect the country's president (see Monitor, August 27). The incumbent, Lennart Meri, inched up to 52 votes in the third round, well short of the 68 votes required for reelection. Challenger Arnold... MORE
FUNDING PROBLEMS AFFLICT RUSSIA’S NUCLEAR POWER INDUSTRY.
Funding shortages and a resulting potential fall in safety levels could compel Russia to close some of its nuclear power plants, a spokesman for Rosenergoatom said on August 25. According to the official, Rosenergoatom is owed more than 4 trillion rubles ($750 million), and the... MORE
MEDIA BLITZ BURIES CHALLENGER IN SARATOV.
As the September 1 gubernatorial election draws near in Saratov oblast, the gap between the incumbent Dmitri Ayatskov, and his main challenger, Communist Anatoly Gordeev, is growing wider by the day. The Monitor's correspondent in the region reports that no serious analyst doubts that victory... MORE
GERMAN DEFENSE MINISTER WARNS AGAINST CHECHNYA BLOODBATH.
In an interview with a German newspaper that was published over the weekend, Germany's defense minister described Russia as an important ally for Bonn and other members of NATO. But Volker Ruehe also cautioned that a "strategic partnership" between Russia and the alliance was only... MORE
MOSCOW DEFENDS POLICY IN CHECHNYA.
Attempting to deflect Western criticism of Russian policy in Chechnya, a Foreign Ministry spokesman yesterday said that no country is more interested in a peaceful settlement of the war than Russia itself. The spokesman also said that Moscow respects foreign reactions to developments in Chechnya... MORE
KORZHAKOV’S REPLACEMENT NAMED.
Russian President Boris Yeltsin has appointed Anatoly Kuznetsov to head the Presidential Security Service (SBP). The burly Kuznetsov has been Yeltsin's personal bodyguard for several years. The SBP, which number almost 1,500 men, has been in the doldrums since Yeltsin sacked Aleksandr Korzhakov in late... MORE
DUBININ BECOMES RUSSIA’S AMBASSADOR TO UKRAINE.
One of Russia's most senior diplomats, Yuri Dubinin, yesterday presented his credentials as Russian ambassador to Ukraine. Dubinin reminded Ukrainian president Leonid Kuchma at the ceremony that Russia is important to Ukraine's security. (Interfax-Ukraine, August 27. See also Perspective section below). A former Soviet ambassador... MORE
TURNOUT IN OBLAST ELECTION SUGGESTS COMMUNIST TAKEOVER OF FEDERATION COUNCIL
. In addition to the elections for governors taking place in 52 regions around Russia, elections for regional legislatures are being held this fall in 18 regions. Kaluga oblast, where elections to the 40-seat regional Duma were held on August 25, was the first. The... MORE