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MOSCOW, April 7 (RIA Novosti) - Palestinian...

MOSCOW, April 7 (RIA Novosti) - Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is to meet Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Tuesday for talks on Middle East issues.


MOSCOW, August 11 (RIA Novosti) - The Finnish...

MOSCOW, August 11 (RIA Novosti) - The Finnish owner of a cargo ship, crewed by Russians, that went missing off Portugal"s Atlantic coast on August 1 has asked Russia to assist in tracing the vessel, which may have been hijacked. "The Solchart company and me personally are counting, above all, on Russia"s assistance in the search for the missing vessel and its crew," Viktor Matveyev, the company"s executive director, said. The dry cargo vessel, the Arctic Sea, was due to arrive at the Algerian port of Bejaia on August 4. According to crew members, on July 24, masked men claiming to be police stopped the Arctic Sea in the Baltic Sea and tied up the crew, after which they searched the vessel. The crew is reported to have said the men then left the ship after the 12-hour ordeal and the Arctic Sea resumed its voyage. The Times newspaper cited a Maritime and Coastguard Agency representative as saying "We thought we had spoken to a member of the crew but of course it could have been someone with a gun pointed at their head or a hijacker." Mark Clark said that the ship had last been seen by a Portuguese patrol vessel. "This is the last information we have on the ship. Where she is now no one knows," Clark said, adding "no one can recall a hijacked ship being taken through the [English] channel." According to media reports, the Arctic Sea, which flies the Maltese flag, had a crew of 13 sailors on board as of late March.


As investigators work to identify the cause...

As investigators work to identify the cause of an air crash near the Russian city of Smolensk on Saturday, in which Polish President Lech Kaczynski, his wife, and 94 top officials died, speculations about the issue remain a hot topic among Western experts.

Feature

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev signed...

The government was told to downsize Interior Ministry personnel by 20% before January 1, 2012.

He also ordered the closure of two ministry departments, according to the Kremlin press service.

The departments in question were not specified.

The decree also orders the interior minister to review personnel selection procedures with a view to making the force better motivated, focused and professional.

The minister was given three months to work out an anti-corruption program.

Calls for police reform were spurred by a number of incidents involving Interior Ministry officers. In the worst incident, which occurred in April, Denis Yevsyukov, then a police major, took a taxi to a supermarket in southern Moscow, where he shot the driver dead, before walking into a store and killed two more people and wounded six others.

Medvedev has pledged radical changes to the Interior Ministry"s structure, but said responsible workers would retain their jobs.

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