Prime Minister Vladimir Putin was shown around his new website, www.premier.gov.ru, Friday. The project was presented to him by an unidentified team of developers. No comments have been made about his reaction, but he does not look particularly pleased in the photo. On the other hand, perhaps he was simply annoyed by the need to use a one-button mouse, which feels foreign to most Russian PC users.
Vladimir Putin made his first visit to the official Prime Minister's website, www.premier.gov.ru, as KP reported on October 30. A presidential website, www.kremlin.ru, was created during Mr Putin's presidential tenure, and then went over to Dmitry Medvedev. The Prime Minister has, until recently, shared his personal web-portal with the government's site, www.government.ru. Now, he has a web resource of his own. After browsing it for a while, we came to several curious conclusions.
On November 6, a programme for the development of competition, prepared by the Economic Development Ministry, and a package of amendments to anti-monopoly legislation will be presented to the government's Council for Competition and Entrepreneurship at a meeting chaired by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. The objective is to limit the powers of the Federal Anti-Monopoly Service (FAS) to only control monopolies. The list of steps to be agreed on with the FAS should, on the Ministry's suggestion, be trimmed down. The programme's ultimate aim is to dispense with much of the formality associated with relations regulation.
Just as he promised the other day, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin chaired a meeting on economic issues at his Novo-Ogaryovo residence. The meeting was supposed to approve a comprehensive plan for supporting domestic industries. Russian banks now receiving massive federal allocations must not transfer them abroad and must not use them to buy dollars, either. On the contrary, the funding must be used to finance the Russian economy. An amended version of a plan, drafted on orders from President Dmitry Medvedev, is to be published in the next few days.
The personal website of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin went public on the Russian Government's Internet portal www.government.ru on Friday. The website address is: www.premier.gov.ru . The new Internet resource carries information on Vladimir Putin's work as the Head of Government. It features an archive of all the Premier's speeches and statements as well as articles about Putin published in Russian and foreign media. The site offers a considerable amount of audio and video information and more recently, a full photo gallery.
The financial crisis that broke out in the West has revealed flaws in the world financial architecture. In this context, the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation is not going to sit on its hands, but will work to create a multi-polar world. This was the main outcome of yesterday's meeting of the SCO heads of government in Astana.
The Russian Prime Minister attended a meeting of the heads of government of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation yesterday. Our special correspondent ANDREI KOLESNIKOV could see for himself that, throughout the day, Vladimir Putin was more concerned with what was happening in Russia in connection with the world financial crisis. A package of extra measures to assist the national industry was due to be published today, and our special correspondent tried to find out why it did not happen.
Addressing a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation's heads of government in Astana on Wednesday, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said, "A qualitatively new geopolitical situation is emerging, with accelerated strengthening of new centres of economic growth and political influence."
The world financial crisis has not spared the member states of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO). The keynote of yesterday's meeting of the SCO heads of state in Astana was "No to the crisis".
No sooner had the ink dried on the October 28 agreements between Russian and Chinese Prime Ministers Vladimir Putin and Wen Jiabao, than Russian industrialists and analysts started sharply criticising them. The Union of Oil and Gas Equipment Manufacturers opposed an agreement on a tied Chinese loan for buying drilling equipment from China. Analysts said the agreements tied Moscow to Beijing, and would enable the Chinese side to dictate its terms to Russia.