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Эксперт назвал бесполезной борьбу с самогонными аппаратами в России
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India can play pivotal role in Afghanistan s stability after US withdrawal
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Russian relations: Biden needs new strategy against Vladimir Putin
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Leader-Oriented Relations Between Russia and Turkey in Times of Pandemic
Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 18 Issue: 83
(Source: Anadolu Agency)
At the end of April, Minister Fahrettin Koca announced that the Ministry of Health had granted emergency use authorization in Turkey to Russia’s COVID-19 vaccine (
Anadolu Agency, April 30). Sputnik V became the third vaccine to receive such approval, after China’s Sinovac and the Pfizer-BioNTech shot, developed in the United States. Moreover, the Turkish firm Viscoran Medicine will be producing the Sputnik V vaccine in Turkey, based on an agreement with the Russian Direct Investment Fund.
The emergency authorization was granted amidst ongoing criticisms against the Turkish government for the slow pace of immunization in Turkey. Earlier, Koca announced that the health ministry planned to vaccinate 60 percent of Turks by the end of May (
Ukraine’s New Naval Doctrine: A Revision of the Mosquito Fleet Strategy or Bureaucratic Inconsistency?
Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 18 Issue: 83
(Source: 112.international)
For Ukraine, which lost more than 70 percent of its naval assets after Russia’s forcible annexation of Crimea, the ability to effectively deter and adequately respond to further aggressive Russian actions at sea is extremely important. The crucial nature of properly addressing this threat was reconfirmed earlier this spring (March–April 2021), amidst the buildup of Russian heavy military forces around Ukraine’s borders, which notably included the deployment of offensive units to Crimea as well as the strengthening of its naval forces in the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov (see EDM, April 13, 27 [1][2][3], May 3).