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  1. 29. Feb. 2024 · This marks the second incident of fire on a russian vessel, with the Yermak icebreaker being ablaze in the port of St. Petersburg on February 29. According to the video released by the russian Ministry of Emergency Situations, the fire started on the first and second decks. There was no information about casualties in the incident.

  2. In March 1994, he became first deputy head of the city administration. From 1995 through June 1997, he led the Saint Petersburg branch of the pro-government Our Home Is Russia political party. [5] From 1995 through June 1996 he was also the head of the advisory board of the JSC Newspaper Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti.

  3. Police Search Homes of Nadezhdin Campaign Volunteers in Southern Russia. Read also: Raid in Russia’s Kursk and Belgorod oblasts may last until sham presidential ‘elections’ – Russian ...

  4. 11. März 2024 · Kevin P. Riehle: The Russian FSB. A. Admin. March 11, 2024 / 5 mins read. The Russian FSB: A Concise History of the Federal Security Service is an introduction to Putin’s formidable intelligence and security organization. Read on for a Q&A with the author to learn about how the book came to be; the importance of imagery to Russian security ...

  5. 30. Aug. 2021 · The FSB stands as arguably the most well-known of the modern Russian security services. The FSB is one of the direct descendants of the Soviet Committee for State Security (KGB). During the chaos of the 1990s the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic evolved into the Russian Federation. So too the KGB evolved into a number of successor ...

  6. Ždanoka's first case officer was Dmitry Gladey, 74, a veteran FSB cadre from St. Petersburg. For decades, Gladey’s public-facing role has been as one of Russia’s representatives to various election monitoring organizations. His most recent role is that of chairman of the International Institute for Monitoring the Development of Democracy ...

  7. 11. Feb. 2021 · The FSB squad followed him by train to St. Petersburg and back between 20 and 22 March 2015 – again taking a train a day earlier and returning on the same day as Kara-Murza. During this trip, authorities prevented Kara-Murza and the political strategist and analyst Stanislav Belkovsk y from holding a public lecture organized by Open Russia.