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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%.


Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin proposed...

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin proposed on Friday that Russia"s energy giant Gazprom and Ukraine"s gas monopoly Naftogaz should create a joint holding.


The United States may send as many as 9,000...

The United States may send as many as 9,000 Marines to southern Afghanistan to fight Taliban militants just days after President Obama outlines his new war strategy, The Washington Post reported on Sunday.

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A proposed merger between the two largest...

the black sea, Ukraine"s gas industry will "die."

Vedomosti said the European Union has not yet interfered with the deal.

"Mergers are the affair of the sides involved," Vedomosti quoted EU Energy Commissioner, Marlene Holzner as saying. She added that Ukraine"s most important objective was to continue reforming its gas industry.

During the fourth Europe-Ukraine Forum, held in Kiev on April 26-28, Russian parliamentary Deputy Evgeniy Fedorov proposed the creation of a united economic space from Russia"s far eastern port of Sakahlin to the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkov.

"I don"t care what the country will be called - whether it"s Russia, Ukraine or Kievan Rus," Russian business daily Kommersant quoted Fedorov as saying.

Fedorov said the unification should encourage industrial and technological development and improve people"s quality of life.

MOSCOW, May 4 (RIA Novosti)



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