The Inside Story of How Alexey Navalny Uncovered Putin s $1.3 Billion Palace Time 1/29/2021 Madeline Roache © Vitaly Nevar TASS via Getty Images A woman holds a toilet brush as she takes part in an unauthorized rally in support of Russian opposition activist Alexey Navalny.
Two days after Alexey Navalny, head of Russia’s Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK) was arrested on his return to Moscow from Berlin, he released a video expose that shocked Russians and people around the world. In the video, “Putin’s palace. History of the world’s largest bribe,” Navalny alleged that an opulent property near Gelendzhik, a town in the southern Russian region of Krasnodar, was constructed for Russian President Vladimir Putin with illicit funds of $1.35 billion, provided by members of his inner circle, and that Putin is the real owner of the palace.
Харківські угоди: Чи розділять відповідальність з Януковичем нардепи, які торгували Кримом – Depo ua
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В Москве прошла церемония прощания с Сергеем Приходько
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Russia says U.S. agreed to renew nuclear weapons pact on our terms By Alexandra Odynova
January 27, 2021 / 8:51 AM / CBS News
Moscow Russia s parliament ploughed ahead on Wednesday to ratify a bill extending the New START nuclear arms control treaty with the United States after the first phone call between President Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin. The Kremlin announced on Tuesday that Russia and the U.S. had struck a deal to extend the treaty the last arms control pact between the world s two biggest nuclear powers which is set to expire on February 5.
Then-Vice President Joe Biden, left, shakes hands with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia in a March 10, 2011, file photo.