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MOSCOW, July 1 (RIA Novosti) - Japanese...

MOSCOW, July 1 (RIA Novosti) - Japanese financial group Aruji will set up a fund worth 200 billion Japanese yen (over $1.85 billion) for investments in Russian real estate, the president of Aruji Gate Securities Inc. said on Tuesday.


The Russian representative office in the...

The Russian representative office in the Vatican, will change its diplomatic status and become a full-fledged embassy, the Russian government said on its Web site on Saturday.


MOSCOW, April 27 (RIA Novosti) - Over 50%...

MOSCOW, April 27 (RIA Novosti) - Over 50% of Russians believe that corruption is an unavoidable and permanent fact of life, according to a nationwide survey published on Monday. The All-Russian Public Opinion Research Center (VTsIOM) found that 58% of respondents said it was impossible to fight against corruption in Russia. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev made the fight against corruption one of his top priorities soon after his inauguration last May, signing a decree to set up a presidential anti-corruption council just two weeks after he was sworn in. The opinion poll found that 44% of Russians consider the greed and immorality of officials as the main causes of corruption. Meanwhile, 49% of Russians believe that it would be easier for them to cope with legal and other problems if officials stopped taking bribes, while 29% of respondents said corruption did not have an influence on the way problems were handled. The poll involved 1,600 people in 140 Russian towns and cities on April 4-5. The margin of statistical error is 3.4%.

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Moscow"s leading cultural figures signed...

The letter comes as Medvedev launched an overall reform of the Interior Ministry, trimming police numbers and raising salaries in an effort to reduce corruption.

The crash caused the deaths of a well-known gynecologist, Vera Sidelnikova, and her daughter-in-law, Olga Alexandrina, also a doctor.

The accident occurred on February 25 on Moscow"s Leninsky Prospekt when the chauffeur-driven Mercedes of a vice-president of Russia"s largest independent oil company, LUKoil, collided with the small Citroen driven by Alexandrina.

The LUKoil executive, Anatoly Barkov, was hospitalized with minor injuries, while his driver, Vladimir Kartayev, refused medical treatment.

The letter, written by novelist and outspoken feminist Maria Arbatova, accused police of being biased and hushing up the details of the investigation.

"The information which has come from police to the press is a mockery of the doctors" memory. At first, police said that the late Olga Alexandrina

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