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MOSCOW, May 1 (RIA Novosti) - About 400,000...

MOSCOW, May 1 (RIA Novosti) - About 400,000 Russians on Friday celebrated Spring and Labor Day, with trade unions and political parties holding rallies across the country. "As of 15:00 Moscow time [11:00 GMT], 491 demonstrations, rallies and assemblies took place in Russia, with about 400,000 people participating," police said, adding that 32,000 police and Interior Ministry troops worked to ensure public order during the events across Russia. May 1 is Spring and Labor Day across Russia, a national holiday. In Soviet times May 1 saw massive Communist Party rallies. Moscow police reported earlier in the day that as around 25,000 people were taking part in events in downtown Moscow to mark the day, including demonstrations by the ruling United Russia party, the Communists and trade unions, the ultranationalist LDPR Party and the liberal Yabloko party. No public order problems were reported in Moscow, but police have detained 120 nationalists, anti-fascists and anarchists following demonstrations in St. Petersburg. Police seized a number of knives and rubber-bullets pistols.


MOSCOW, May 9 (RIA Novosti) - A military...

MOSCOW, May 9 (RIA Novosti) - A military parade involving over 9,000 personnel, 103 sophisticated tracked and wheeled military vehicles, as well as 69 aircraft and helicopters was launched on Moscow's Red Square at 10:00 a.m. Moscow time (06:00 GMT) on Saturday, when Russia celebrates Victory Day.


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.

Politics

MOSCOW, October 2 (RIA Novosti) - A Moscow...

During the Facing the City talk show on the TV-Center channel in June, Luzhkov used the word "fags" when referring to members of the gay community.

Nikolai Alekseyev, an activist who has attempted a number of times without success to organize a gay parade in Moscow, said that no one should be allowed to offend any group of people or individual.

"In making such a ruling, the court risks making rudeness the law," Alekseyev told RIA Novosti on Friday.

A TV-Center representative said there was no offense or defamation to any concrete plaintiff in Luzhkov"s use of the word.

"This whole process is extremely politicized. Their goal is publicity, I don"t see any other purpose," the representative said.

Alekseyev had filed a suit against the mayor for one kopek and said he plans to appeal the court"s decision.

"We were refused the right to have a linguistic expert [research the word] and I"m sure that that expertise would have proven that what the

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