company:russians

  • A no-fly zone for Aleppo risks a war that could engulf us all | Jonathan Steele
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/oct/12/no-fly-zone-aleppo-war-russia-syria

    There are only three sensible ways to save Aleppo’s people. One is the voluntary departure of the jihadis who, in the words of UN envoy Staffan de Mistura, are holding civilians hostage. One could go further and say they are keeping eastern Aleppo’s civilians as human shields. Why, for example, have most people not left already, given the intensity of Russian bombing: is it that the jihadis are blocking people’s escape? Syria is also mired in a propaganda war, and in the heart-rending images that the rebels put out on social media about life and death in Aleppo, the seamier side of the armed groups’ control is suppressed.

    Hundreds of civilians recently left the besieged Damascus suburb of Daraya after the rebels gave in, with no reprisals from Assad forces. Gunmen were even allowed to keep their weapons and were taken by buses to rebel-held areas in the north.

    The second option is for Syrian government forces to retake the whole city, just as Iraqi forces retook jihadi-held Ramadi and Falluja in recent months. Iraqi barrel bombs and US airstrikes had left three-quarters of those cities in ruins, but civilians got the chance to rebuild their lives.

    The concept of an Assad victory will stick in the throats of hundreds of thousands of Syrians who have lost so much in the fight against him. But if the secular multicultural tolerance of pre-war Syria is to be restored, it is better to deny victory to the Sunni extremists who pose the main opposition to Assad, whether it is Islamic State, the al-Qaida-linked Jabhat al-Nusra or similar groups.

    The third option is a ceasefire. Last month’s Russian-US agreement provided for the superpowers to separate the al-Nusra fighters from those Syrian Islamists prepared to negotiate with Assad’s representatives in Geneva for a coalition government.

    The ceasefire never took hold because the Islamists refused to split. Al-Nusra understandably did not want to be isolated and left vulnerable to a joint US-Russian air campaign. So they used their dominance among the Aleppo fighters to press the other groups to stick with them. For their part, the non-Nusra fighters feared an alliance between the Americans, the Russians and Assad’s army.

  • Down on their luck: Minsk casinos hit by Russian downturn | World news | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/oct/19/down-on-their-luck-minsk-casinos-hit-by-russian-downturn

    The casinos of Belarus’s capital were once so full of rich players from Moscow that some called it the “Russian Las Vegas”.

    Flush in cash, gambling dens such as the XO and Carat gave away Hummers and Range Rovers just to make the eight-hour drive back to Moscow, where gambling has been illegal since 2009, more enjoyable. High rollers would bring $100,000 to play for a weekend, and the luxury property market grew as rich Russians bought apartments and installed their local mistresses in them.

    #biélorussie #soviétisme #casino #russie

  • Russian Health Officials Comment on Proposed Condom Ban | News | The Moscow Times
    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/russian-health-officials-comment-on-proposed-condom-ban/527010.html

    Russia’s proposed restrictions on condom imports would make citizens more “disciplined,” and may also help raise the birth rate, a Cabinet adviser and former public health chief was quoted by Russian media as saying.

    Gennady Onishchenko, a former chief sanitary doctor known for his creative approach to medical advice, said Tuesday that “rubber technical goods [condoms] have nothing to do with health,” state news agency RIA Novosti reported.

    Onishchenko was commenting on import restrictions proposed by the Industry and Trade Ministry earlier in the day, which also called for a ban on X-ray and ultrasound machines, defibrillators, incubators and other medical equipment.

    Banning condom imports “will simply make one more disciplined, more strict and discriminating in choosing partners, and maybe will do a favor to our society in respect to solving demographic problems,” Onishchenko was quoted by RIA Novosti as saying.

    His comments come at a time when sexually transmitted diseases are widespread in Russia and HIV infection rates are on the rise, even as most European countries have succeeded in bringing them down.

    But the head of a federal center for combating AIDS, Vadim Pokrovsky, argued that there is “no direct link” between HIV infection rates and the availability of imported condoms, because they are too pricey for many students and other low-income Russians, Interfax news agency reported.

    If a [trade school] student has to choose whether to buy a beer or a condom, he will probably buy a beer, because it’s cheaper,” Pokrovsky was quoted as saying.

    The real issue is the shortage of cheap condoms in the country, he said, conceding, however, that the quality of the cheaper varieties that are available might not make them particularly popular.

    Of course, there is a question of quality, and in this regard a problem certainly exists,” Pokrovsky was quoted by Interfax as saying.