Showing posts with label Russia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russia. Show all posts

Space Dogs Vs Space Monkeys


When the Americans had to find a way to write in space in a gravity free environment they spent 1 million dollars to develop the fisher space pen the more practical Russians used pencils ok but is dose not stop there 

Russians send a Satelite in space Sputnik 1 October 4, 1957
Americans send a satelite in space Explorer 1 January 31, 1958
Russian First living being in Space Laika November 3, 1957
Russians First human space flight Yuri Gagarin Vostok 1 April 12, 1961
American First monkey Abel and Miss Baker to return from space safely JUPITER AM-18 May 28, 1959
Americans First human space flightJohn Glenn's Mercury-Atlas 6  February 20, 1962

What strikes me is that the Russians were very efficient in their space program and skipped sending monkeys in Space actually Yuri Gagarin replaced the role of the American space monkeys and he was much more lucky than his American monkey counter parts.

To this day the Russian space program is much more stable and logical the proof is that the space shuttle program is coming to an end where as the Russian space program is like old faithful popping rockets up into space year after year.











Funny Pic of Putin

Shame on Gazprom

First in my  opinion the Okhta Social & Business Center is ugly and I´m sorry to say architecturally weak minded, and its ugliness and stupidity cast a shadow on the beauty and intelligence of St. Petersburg, Peter the Great must be turning in his grave.

I agree with Andrei Bokov, president of the Russian Union of Architects when he states


“This project is naive and aggressive; it is dull, it is archaic. Chinese cities are being built with buildings that are vastly more interesting and better than what you are offering. Your brains haven’t been turned on.”

Unfortunately St. Petersburg Governor Valentina Matviyenko signed a decree exempting the Okhta Center from the city's height restriction law last month which opens the door to this aberration.


On top of this Gazprom awarded the construction of this stain on our blue skys to an Arab company who is known for exploiting it workers, In a recent 2009 BBC Panorama program, Arabtec was exposed as treating their migrant workers inhumanely. The program showed how Arabtec failed to provide its workers with basic amenities to live. The reporter covering these allegations against Arabtec nearly vomited whilst visiting the camps (especially Nad al Sheba Camp) as a result of the gross unsanitary conditions he experienced.

Documents which had been obtained by the BBC clearly show that a month previous to the television crews' visit, the Dubai municipality described the sewage situation at the site as critical. Arabtec had also been fined 10,000 dirhams,which is approximately £2,000, (what a joke) for neglecting hygiene standards and allowing sewage to overflow into accommodation used by workers.

To add insult to pain it seems that we the citizens  of SPB will be funding 49% the project being worth 10,000,000,000.00 AED which equals 2,722,347,672 USD the city of St. Petersburg would have a share of 1,333,950,359 USD, The population being about 4,661,219 would mean that each person would in effect pay about 300 USD.

I wish we could use this money to renovate the historic building instead and help the poor baboushkas.

I beg you Mr. Putin do something it is your city you love it for sure more than I do, call this towel head Riad Kamal and tell him to go back to his desert culture and veto this project since it is ugly and misplaced, the world will love you for it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabtec

http://www.arabtecuae.com


SPB Open Air The Railway Museum

The Railway Museum owns a collection of old locomotives and cars, which is displayed , just outside St. Petersburg (from the Vitebsk Railway Station take a local train to Parovozny Muzei). I went there today with the family and it was quite interesting especially the Balistic Missile Train Wagon.


Chernobyl Decay and Deformed

Close Down All Nuclear Power Stations Now

Nuclear Power Station Threat to Saint Petersburg


Saint Petersburg is the crown jewel of Russia it is so beautiful, it is alsothe home of my familly unfortunately we live with the threat of an old and seems to be miss managed Nuclear power plant.

In 2009 whilst on a business trip abroad the news leaked of an incident at the plant the news became public only 24 hrs later in Russia. Images of Chernobyle and its effects on children flashed in my head, I called my wife and told her to buy potassium iodide tablets and stay indoors I can tell you I felt so disarmed.

Here are the facts:

Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant (Russian: Ленинградская атомная электростанция; Ленинградская АЭС) is a nuclear power plant located in the town of Sosnovy Bor in Russia's Leningrad Oblast, on the southern shore of the Gulf of Finland, some 80 km to the west of the city centre of Saint Petersburg. It consists of 4 nuclear reactors of RBMK-1000 type. These reactors are identical to reactors No. 1 and 2 of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant.


In 1975 there was a partial meltdown in Leningrad reactor Unit 1 that released 1.5 MCi into the environment.

In March 1992, an accident at the Sosnovy Bor nuclear plant leaked radioactive gases and iodine into the air through a ruptured fuel channel. This was the first accident at the station announced in the news media.

In December 2005, a non-nuclear smelter at the facility exploded, badly injuring three people. A private company reprocessing scrap metal at the facility was operating the smelter, which overheated and exploded spraying molten metal across a large area and starting several fires. Three workers were burned in the explosion, with two experiencing burns over 90 percent of their bodies.

On August 27, 2009 the 3rd unit was stopped due to finding a hole in the discharge header of a pump.


The Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter published a short notice on page 27 in the 29 August issue about a coolant leak at the plant. The problem is described as serious but without any immediate risk of radiation in the surrounding environment.

Licensed to Kill By Jamison Firestone







In the summer of 1993, I set up a law firm in Moscow with an American friend, Terry Duncan. All of the lawyers were Russians. They were the brightest of the bright. Young Russian lawyers from the best schools who believed in Russia, the rule of law and the future of their country. We shared a common vision: Russia was the place to be. History was being made, and we were at the center of it. Law mattered, Russia had a bright future, and lawyers and law were central to that future.
One of those young men who shared this vision and passion was Sergei Magnitsky, who worked with me for more than 10 years. I believe that he was killed in prison by corrupt law enforcement officers.
There are those who would question my use of the word killed. Some would call it an overreaction. It is not.
Magnitsky testified against a group of Interior Ministry officers who we believe stole more than 5 billion rubles from the Russian treasury. One month later, those same officers arrested Magnitsky on completely false charges that made no legal sense. They held him in prison in horrible conditions. When Magnitsky’s health deteriorated, they denied him access to doctors, medicine and a routine but critical operation. He died Monday evening.
Magnitsky did not die by chance. He died because corrupt Interior Ministry officers killed him: They knowingly imprisoned an innocent man, destroyed his health and denied him access to medical treatment. Maybe the ministry just wanted to put pressure on him. But when detained people are tortured, they sometimes die, and in this case the people applying the pressure become killers.
Magnitsky’s story is all the more terrible because it is now routine. Let’s be honest, the so-called law enforcement agencies are detested by everyone and respected by no one. Corrupt officers routinely open criminal cases against the innocent, imprison people, kill people and steal with impunity. They are not above the law: They are the law. They are in effect licensed to kill.
One of the most interesting things about reading the articles and Internet blogs about Magnitsky’s death is how universal this opinion is. Nobody believes the Interior Ministry, and everyone understands that Magnitsky was effectively killed, and that he is just another of the many victims of the country’s abuse of police powers.
“Russian law” has become an oxymoron.
When are these crimes carried out by law enforcement agencies going to stop? When are we going to take back this country from the gang of criminals in uniform that has decided that it is the law?
Although I support President Dmitry Medvedev’s statements about fighting legal nihilism and corruption, he should publicly acknowledge that law enforcement agencies and the courts are now the main forces that threaten the ordinary citizens of this country.
Medvedev asks Russians not to give up hope and fall into legal nihilism, and then he allows a bunch of bandits in uniforms to rule over us. Corrupt officers steal and kill, and the government does nothing. Occasionally a statement is made about how the president or prime minister cannot interfere with law enforcement agencies, but law enforcement agencies are now Russia’s largest problem. They are the enforcers of the new mafia. If Medvedev is not prepared to interfere, who will? The few who try to interfere, like Magnitsky, die.
I write this article with a profound sadness that goes deeper than losing a friend. I have watched the profession of law in Russia descend into something that is absolutely meaningless. What is the use of being a lawyer when there is no law? I have watched countless young idealistic lawyers learn through experience that in a growing number of situations there really is no law in Russia. I have watched law enforcement agencies and courts increasingly become agents of thieves and chase into exile, imprison and kill many of the people whom Russia needs most. This is the real face of the “dictatorship of the law.”
I do not think that there is anything shocking in what I am now saying other than the fact that I am saying it openly. And that in itself says a lot about the state of Russian law. Truthfully, I am afraid while writing this article. In today’s Russia, such an article can be deemed “suicidal.” My friends would say it is an invitation to be charged with a crime or for the government to deport me. Maybe they are correct, but if they are, then Medvedev has failed miserably.
I have spent this week after Magnitsky’s death speaking with friends and clients and with scores of people whom I had never met before. All of us are stunned. We detest the people who did this to Magnitsky and who routinely do this to others. We are angered and outraged by a system that stands by silently and allows this to continue. We are confused as to why Medvedev who says all the right things does absolutely nothing.
These are not the words of a dissident. These are the words of someone who is fighting for rule of law, whose Russian and foreign friends have died for this country and of a patriot who loves this country. It’s time to revoke law enforcement agencies’ license to steal and kill and to end Russia’s dictatorship of the law.

Jamison Firestone is an attorney and managing partner of Firestone Duncan, which has offices in Moscow and St. Petersburg.

English speaking Lawyer Russia

If you are looking for an English speaking  lawyer in Saint Petersburg Russia that will not ask for extortionist fees then Olga is then perl you are looking for, she is professional and with her Russian partner Vadim Suhov will take care of all your legal needs.

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Sergei Magnitsky




Sergei Magnitsky died in a Moscow jail after complaining for weeks of being denied adequate medical treatment. He leaves behind a widow and two children.

Mr. Bill Browder stated "He never thought that he'd be arrested. He believed there was rule of law in Russia."  "He was a brave and innocent man taken hostage by the very officials he implicated in a major crime against the Russian state,"

Mrs.Irina Dudukina, spokeswoman for the investigative unit of the Interior Ministry, said Mr. Magnitsky died Monday evening of "heart failure." She said there was no record of health problems in his criminal file and that he hadn't complained about health problems at a court hearing last week.

Mr. Jamison Firestone, managing partner of Firestone Duncan, the Moscow firm where Mr. Magnitsky worked stated "They held him for 11 months, asking him to fabricate testimony against Hermitage," ,"The more he refused, the worse his conditions became." Russian officials have denied those allegations. , "It is now impossible in Russia to defend a client who is in a politically motivated case or in a [commercial] case where the other side has a lot of money and is willing to play dirty," , "At worst, you will end up in prison, in exile, or dead,"

Expat in SPB

We bought a flat in Saint Petersburg a number of years ago and finished renovating it recently, we have decided that it will be our home part of the year so I am going to relate my experiences about living here.


Objectives:

Visa and Russian Nationality
Learn Russian
Make Contacts
Prospect Business opportunities
Find places of interest
Other

so for today here is a link to a useful website http://www.inyourpocket.com/russia/st-petersburg