A senior female official at the football team Spartak Moscow and the head
August 5, 2010 by admin
Filed under Entertainment
A senior female official at the football team Spartak Moscow and the head of the Russian Ice Hockey Federation have been shot dead since April.. Rotor Volgograd came fourth in Russia’s premier league this season, down from second last year.
Violent crime has increasingly infected sport in Russia, because of the high financial stakes and the country’s economic decline. IN GREETING Commander Lere Anak Timur, deputy chief of staff of Fretilin, the East Timorese guerrilla army, you clap him on both shoulders in a bear hug, but you do not shake his hand for the simple reason that it is not all there. Oleg Veretennikov, 28, a striker with Rotor Volgograd and Russia’s top scorer, was out walking with Tanya, two, in the city when she was burnt in the face, and he received hand injuries
Police suspect an embittered fan may be responsible. He feigns indignation when it is suggested that he has been too extravagant.
“What should we have built? An izba – a peasant’s log hut – on hen’s legs?”. POLICE IN Russia are hunting a hooded man who threw sulphuric acid in the face of the daughter of a leading footballer. Though not as bad as Grozny, hostage-taking and crime has spilt over the Chechen border. Russian taxi drivers refuse to go into Ingushetia, for fear of being abducted.Yet Mr Aushev is unrepentant about his grand plans. Ingushetia is still burdened by thousands of refugees from the Chechen war The water system and sanitation are bad There is much poverty. The Ingush authorities will not say how much they plan to squander on Magas or exactly where the money is coming from, although they attribute much of it to Ingushetia’s earnings as an economic free zone. But the bill will run into hundreds of millions of dollars.It will be chalked up as wasted wealth until the republic becomes more stable and can develop a normal economy That day is some way off.
“These days, it is better to be a British colony than a subject of Russia,” he told Vremya newspaper last month. “The British would at least have invested money.”Certainly, money – despite his lavish spending on the capital – is sorely needed. The ceremony at Magas was timed to coincide with the sixth anniversary of the eruption of the Ingush-Ossetian conflict.At present, Mr Aushev stops short of a demand for full independence, although he has announced that he will leave the federation if Moscow’s “imperialism” in the Caucasus and a shortage of funds continue. Like the Chechens, they were deported by Stalin in 1944 to central Asia, where at least 100,000 died of sickness and starvation in the first two years alone.The creation of a new Ingush capital, a few miles from Nazran – the old administrative centre – is both a gesture of further independence and an attempt to cock a snook at the neighbouring Ossetians. It is one of the 89 regions and republics of the Russian Federation, and is therefore still answerable to Moscow.
And yet he is behaving like the head of a nation 20 times the size and, more to the point, an independent one.Why? Because his small Islamic corner of the Caucasus is steadily slipping away from Moscow’s enfeebled grasp. It has avoided doing so in the same flagrant way as its Chechen neighbours, whose declaration of independence after the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991 led the Russians, three years later, to send in their tanks.Yet the Ingush share the same troubled relationship with their masters in the north, and the same strong sense of their separate identity. “I feel as if I have been born for a second time,” he told his guests rapturously.Mr Aushev runs the republic of Ingushetia which, with a population of 300,000, is smaller than Bristol. No matter, too, that half his guests seemed to be armed bodyguards, testimony to the deep instability of this part of the world and the Caucasian penchant for hostage-taking.When President Aushev, 44, a decorated Soviet hero of the Afghan war, sets out to enjoy himself, he does it in medieval style. Teams of dancers went through their paces; his troops fired a multi-gun salute; local leaders even gave him presents of sable furs and paintings.No matter that more than half the place – set in a potato field on the plains north of the Caucasus mountains – was still a mud-bound building site. Behind him stood his fine new presidential residence with its reflective glass windows, columned entrance and white dome.