VLADIMIR PUTIN
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VLADIMIR PUTIN

Media Review

7 august 2009
Press Russian International

Vedomosti: " Values: Correcting birth defects"

Is it possible that Russia, by its very nature, simply cannot be integrated into the international community as part of a “greater Europe?” Is it rejected in Europe as a matter of sheer principle, or simply because the country’s leaders are not acceptable there? Fyodor Lukyanov sheds some light on this question in his article by analysing the history of Russia’s relations with the world under Vladimir Putin’s watch, from the initial rapprochement with the West to all the subsequent frustration and confrontation. In the 1990s, it was customary to say that the West “lost Russia”. Today, it is more common to hear the claim that Moscow’s policies have driven the US and Europe away from Russia. So, who exactly has “lost” whom?


5 august 2009

Rossiiskaya Gazeta: “Miracle Field”

A veritable miracle occurred in the boundless fields of Orenburg Region on Tuesday: the 35 degree heat that had plagued the region since May and destroyed a third of its crops suddenly gave way to rain on the very day the Russian Prime Minister arrived.

5 august 2009

RBC Daily: "Waiting for an intervention"

Originally grain interventions for this agricultural year (the year started on July 1, 2009) were to begin on August 1. However, with grain prices stable, the Government has postponed purchases. Grain intervention will begin if necessary, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said yesterday. In the opinion of grain market analysts, only the Central Black Soil Region may need Government help this year. Russia started buying grain from farmers for the intervention fund in 2002 and has increased purchases every year since. In the 2007/08 farming season it bought 1.45 million tons worth 7 billion roubles, and in 2008/09, 9.6 million tons worth 46 billion roubles.

5 august 2009

Komsomolskaya Pravda: "The Prime Minister takes a day off for extreme sports and a chat with a sheep herder"

After getting his adrenaline going with some extreme sports on Lake Baikal (specifically, submersion all the way to the bottom of the lake), Prime Minister Vladimir Putin sought more adventure in the wild mountains of Tyva. He was so impressed by its breathtaking landscapes when he first visited the area two years ago that he came back again last year, and then for a third visit this time around. He spent Sunday evening and all of Monday in the mountains.

5 august 2009

Kommersant (Moscow): "Money rains down on the drought"

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin yesterday spearheaded the battle against the drought which is expected to cut Russia’s grain harvest this year by 11% against the target. He ordered 100 billion roubles in government credit for the regions to deal with the aftermath of the drought, which is only slightly less than the total credit issued by Rosselkhozbank for the 2009 farm season. The money will not reach the regions until September, but, as an advance payment, Vladimir Putin brought the long-awaited rain to the fields in Orenburg Region for the first time in weeks.

4 august 2009

Gazeta: "Five Stars"

Vladimir Putin, Prime Minister.

The Prime Minister took a one-day holiday and spent it in Tuva in a tent town on the banks of the Khemchik River. He went down the river in an inflatable boat, negotiated several rapids and met with Andrei Subbotin, senior researcher at the Alexei Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution of the Russian Academy of Sciences, who is working on a programme initiated by Mr Putin in 2007 to research and protect the snow leopard.

4 august 2009

Vedomosti: "Vector"

It seems that Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has started a new trend among his subordinates – visiting the Perekryostok supermarket on Osenny Boulevard. In June, in the middle of a meeting on retail trade law, Mr Putin and his First Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov got in their cars and went to see for themselves what retail mark-ups were really like. The mark-ups turned out to be rather large. Perekryostok would not reduce prices and turned the visit into an advertising campaign. A number of different kinds of merchandise now bear the sign “The Premier’s mark-up” – less

19 may 2009

Nezavisimaya Gazeta: "Medvedev is no Pushover"

Speaking about psychological changes in Dmitry Medvedev in the first year of his presidency one should bear in mind that as a mature man in his forties he cannot change drastically. Changes are taking place, but they do not make Medvedev a different person from what he was a year ago.

19 may 2009

Nezavisimaya Gazeta: "Tandem.ru"

Thank God, we have left behind us all the anniversary celebrations, the first anniversary of the presidential election, inauguration, the first anniversary of the new Prime Minister in office with all the fanfare and praise. At the end of the day, we are interested in only one thing: whether the direction and mode of our progress has become any clearer.

19 may 2009

Izvestia: "Prime Minister Vladimir Putin: “Russia should not be just a Space Carrier”

Industrial output in April dropped by 8.1% compared with March, but at least unemployment is not growing as fast. The latest statistics were presented to the Prime Minister at the Cabinet meeting yesterday. But Vladimir Putin looked further ahead. The question that engaged his mind was how the country would develop in the future. It was decided that development would be driven by small business and new technologies.

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