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SUKHUMI, August 12 (RIA Novosti) - Moscow...

SUKHUMI, August 12 (RIA Novosti) - Moscow has no plans to redeploy its Black Sea Fleet warships from Ukraine to Abkhazia, the Russian defense minister said on Wednesday. Russia"s Black Sea Fleet uses a range of naval facilities in Ukraine"s Crimea, including the main base in Sevastopol, as part of a 1997 agreement under which Ukraine agreed to lease the bases to Russia until 2017. Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko announced last summer that Ukraine would not extend the lease of the Sevastopol base beyond 2017, and urged the Russian fleet to start preparations for a withdrawal. "We will stay put in Sevastopol," Anatoly Serdyukov said in reply to a question from a reporter. He also said Moscow would not increase the number of troops either in Abkhazia or South Ossetia, which Russia recognized as independent last August after a five-day war with Georgia over the latter. Asked whether Russia was planning to increase its military presence in the two former Georgian republics, Serdyukov said, "No. Why? It is sufficient." Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who made a one-day visit to Abkhazia on Wednesday, said earlier in the week that Russia would allocate 15-16 billion rubles (over $465 million) in 2010 to strengthen Abkhazian borders, frontier troops and bases.


Canada"s women bobsledders took the gold...

Canada"s women bobsledders took the gold and silver medals at the 2010 Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver to bring an overall number of the medals to 15.


MOSCOW, October 27 (RIA Novosti) - The Russian-crewed...

MOSCOW, October 27 (RIA Novosti) - The Russian-crewed and Maltese-flagged cargo ship at the center of a mysterious hijacking case currently being towed towards Malta will arrive there no earlier than Thursday, a Russian embassy source said Tuesday.

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MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti economic commentator Vlad Grinkevich)

The government has published a list of 295 strategic organizations, which it will help cope with the crisis.

The list, which has already been dubbed a list of "the favored few," enumerates companies working in 25 spheres of the economy, from the oil industry to the media. The government included only companies that employ more than 5,000 people, and have annual sales of no less than 15 billion rubles. Analysts fear that the government's new initiative may engender a welfare mentality, and ultimately do a disservice to the privileged companies.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin instructed his government to compile a list of the "select few" on December 15, and eight days later a government commission headed by Igor Shuvalov had already listed 250 companies. Economic Development Minister Elvira Nabiullina considered it incomplete, and another 45 companies were added.

The list does not give any hints about the government's economic priorities. It contains companies

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