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Interim Kyrgyz leader Roza Otunbayeva said...

Interim Kyrgyz leader Roza Otunbayeva said on Friday the country would become a parliamentary republic after changes are made in the constitution in order to renew democracy.


Poland expressed on Saturday satisfaction...

Poland expressed on Saturday satisfaction with the Russian investigation into a crash that killed Polish President Lech Kaczynski on April 10.


MOSCOW, April 17 (RIA Novosti) - Copyright...

MOSCOW, April 17 (RIA Novosti) - Copyright piracy in Russia which has been a major obstacle to the country joining the WTO dropped by 15% in 2007, year-on-year, the Russian Interior Ministry said on Thursday. Russia, the second-largest market for pirated products after China, has been strongly criticized for its failure to protect intellectual property rights. Over 4,000 people were arrested in 2007, and more than 800 people in January-March this year for breaching copyright laws, said Vladimir Lukyanov, a deputy head of the ministry"s economic security department. Almost 4 million counterfeit items, mainly computer software, DVDs and CDs, worth an estimated 182 million rubles ($8 million) were seized last year, the official added. In 2007, Russia introduced a new law prohibiting the sale of pirated goods on Russian streets, kiosks and retail outlets. However, a spokesman for the economic security department, Vladimir Tsvetkov, said unlicensed CDs were now available for sale online over the Internet, especially in Moscow and St. Petersburg. In 2006, Russia was ranked in the top 10 of the world"s worst offending countries for piracy according to a report by the International Intellectual Property Alliance (IIPA). The issue was a major stumbling block in Russia"s World Trade Organization accession talks with the United States. The sides eventually signed a final agreement in 2006 after Moscow promised to get tough on intellectual property violations. The problem of unlicensed software in Russia has been highlighted by the case of school principal Alexander Ponosov, charged with copyright violation after he bought a set of computers for his school containing unlicensed Microsoft software.

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The pro-Kremlin United Russia party will...

Russia has strongly opposed attempts by some countries, mainly Poland and the Baltic States, to reassess the results of World War II, which the Kremlin says deny the Soviet Union"s contribution to the victory over the Nazis.

"We will not allow anybody to rewrite the results of the war, defile the memory of those who have fallen and rehabilitate Nazism," Irina Yarovaya said, adding that the verdicts of the Nuremberg trials had never been questioned.

United Russia earlier introduced a similar bill to the State Duma, Russia"s lower house of parliament, which dismissed the draft law as needing "serious historical and legal evaluation."

The new bill proposes the introduction of a new article to the Russian criminal code titled on the rehabilitation of Nazism. It would stipulate a fine of up to 300,000 rubles (more than $10,000) or a prison term of up to three years for the "public approval or denial of Nazi crimes against peace and security of humanity determined by

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