Moscow, July 29 (AP-New Europe) - In the suburb of Moscow's most corrupt journalists are beaten to death if they start to 'pry' environmental protection. And the climate is strong enough to generate the only clash - the advent of Putin to power - where protesters (500) have the better of the police. In a hot Moscow the heat and smoke from burning peat bogs 42, held a demonstration today of the people who oppose logging wild, motivated by earlier work for the construction of a highway from Moscow to St. Petersburg.
But if the road network between the two capitals is very weak and needs objectively 'great works', the troubles of Khimki and mismanagement of a suburb sold to factories, right next to a priceless forests, suggest. The situation is grave for years now: one death in 2009 went to further extend the trail of blood on the Russian press. Sergei Protazanov, editor of a small local newspaper, died at Khimki following the beatings. He was working on an investigation "on March 1 of rigging the elections" in 2009 for a newspaper, Grazhdanskoe Soglasie, certainly not leading. But last bastion of press particularly critical of the powerful local governor, Vladimir Vladimirovich Strelchenko.
According to statements made to AGI in the aftermath of the murder, the number two in the Russian Service for environmental monitoring (Rosprirodnadzor), Oleg Mitvol "Protazanov was invalid, had a prosthesis the right hand "and was therefore unable to react to aggression. A journalist working for A little head in Khimki, a suburb north of Moscow. The publication was suspended. And it was the last of three local newspapers of opposition, who were gradually closing, just after a volley of attacks on reporter.Nel November 2008, another opposition journalist in the same Khimki, Mikhail Beketov, director of Pravda Khimkinskaja , was beaten on the outskirts of the Russian capital and admitted to hospital with head injuries and a fractured leg. Another publication of the opposition, Grazhdanskij Forum, has closed after its director was beaten in an ambush.
source
But if the road network between the two capitals is very weak and needs objectively 'great works', the troubles of Khimki and mismanagement of a suburb sold to factories, right next to a priceless forests, suggest. The situation is grave for years now: one death in 2009 went to further extend the trail of blood on the Russian press. Sergei Protazanov, editor of a small local newspaper, died at Khimki following the beatings. He was working on an investigation "on March 1 of rigging the elections" in 2009 for a newspaper, Grazhdanskoe Soglasie, certainly not leading. But last bastion of press particularly critical of the powerful local governor, Vladimir Vladimirovich Strelchenko.
According to statements made to AGI in the aftermath of the murder, the number two in the Russian Service for environmental monitoring (Rosprirodnadzor), Oleg Mitvol "Protazanov was invalid, had a prosthesis the right hand "and was therefore unable to react to aggression. A journalist working for A little head in Khimki, a suburb north of Moscow. The publication was suspended. And it was the last of three local newspapers of opposition, who were gradually closing, just after a volley of attacks on reporter.Nel November 2008, another opposition journalist in the same Khimki, Mikhail Beketov, director of Pravda Khimkinskaja , was beaten on the outskirts of the Russian capital and admitted to hospital with head injuries and a fractured leg. Another publication of the opposition, Grazhdanskij Forum, has closed after its director was beaten in an ambush.
source