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#Denis Kolesnikov
fadedday · 8 days
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Natali Fidelitylie by Denis Kolesnikov
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collageofnudes · 2 months
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Ksenia Anike by Denis Kolesnikov
part 3 / 3 (part 1 , part 2)
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eyesforgrace · 27 days
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Ksenia Anike by kolesnikov
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la-dame-aux-pieds-nus · 7 months
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Photography by Denis Kolesnikov
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drawinkscom · 3 years
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Day top tattoo from drawinks.com Masters: Rustam Sadykov tattoo № 1 Aleksey Yakimov tattoo № 2 Denis Volkov tattoo № 3 Ilya Kolesnikov tattoo № 4 Evgeny Mel tattoo № 5 Evgeny Mel tattoo № 6
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Putin’s Palace Problems
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This morning, I asked why Putin sent Kremlin spokesman Dmitri Peskov to deny that he owned a palace on the Black Sea, instead of doing so himself. 
Well, perhaps Putin saw my post and decided to speak, finally! Today, he conducted an interview via Rossiya 1, in which he denied owning the infamous Palace. 
Let us see whether Putin’s denial refutes the allegations made by Navalny’s documentary, currently at almost 87 million views.   
Andrew Roth and Luke Harding at The Guardian, provided this review of Putin’s responses: 
Putin said that the palace never:
“belongs [sic] to or ever belonged to me or my close relatives. Ever.”
What about proxy and subsidiary companies owned either directly or indirectly by the President of Russia, as Navalny alleges in his documentary? Putin does not respond to that contention, so this denial is meaningless. 
Instead, he said the documentary was “boring”, but then said:
he hadn’t had time to watch it and had merely glanced at a few clips compiled by his assistants.
(Paraphrase from Guardian article.) 
The reason why Putin did not watch the documentary was:
because of too much work
(Source: Tweet by Christo Grozev.)
Think about this. Putin not only faces career-destroying allegations of mass bribery, fraud, and embezzlement going back over 15 years, but also lost contol of the country on Saturday, January 23, as tens of thousands of Russians poured onto the streets in fury. 
This documentary was a key motivation for many, with protesters in one city even chanting “Aquadiscotheque” at the police, in reference to the luxurious rooms found in Putin’s palace. 
You would think that someone facing colossal damage to their reputation and mass disorder nationwide would carefully study the allegations, so that he can refute them and restore calm. 
But Putin says he was too busy to find out why tens of thousands of Russians across 11 time zones were furious enough to shut down entire cities, despite threats of arrest and police brutality. 
Notice how Putin admits that his assistants have “compiled” clips together, already indicating that he has only received an edited version of events. This means by default that he cannot refute central and devastating allegations made in the documentary. 
The lynchpins that destroy Putin’s denial are as follows.
Firstly, that you must phone the FSB for permission to sail or fish along the Black Sea Coast. Navalny proved this by having one of his colleagues phone the FSB, and recording the responses. This colleague was told to sail out for a mile into the sea, before reaching his required fishing destination. 
Putin can deny owning the proxy companies, deny being connected to certain businessmen-- can even deny the allegations of embezzlement all he likes. 
What he cannot deny is that the FSB, his own security service, have total control over who can sail around the Black Sea coast where this palace is located. 
Nowhere in Putin’s denial does he explain why an audio recording proves that FSB permission is required prior to sailing around the area, nor the reason why the FSB have been granted such powers, nor who authorised this. 
Another lynchpin is the fact that Putin’s own former ally, Sergei Kolesnikov, revealed that Putin was embezzling funds to build a palace back in 2010. Not only that, but Kolesnikov wrote an open letter to Dmitri Medvedev at the time, demanding that the latter stop Putin’s corruption. 
(Obviously, this did not happen. Medvedev is a crook, implicated in bribery, fraud, embezzlement, and money laundering.)
Kolesnikov, who is filmed discussing the whole plan with Navalny via video conferencing, released several documents proving how he had worked with Putin to fund this palace over 15 years ago. 
So, Putin can claim that he had too much work to do while the country erupted into outrage, but how does he explain Kolesnikov-- his own former ally-- making the exact same accusations over 10 years ago? Putin did not address this simple, yet devastating conundrum. 
In conclusion: as a matter of principle, I believe that anyone facing serious allegations must be given the opportunity to defend themselves. This includes crooks like Putin. 
It is strange, however, that Navalny’s team released this documentary on 19th January, yet despite the devastating impact on his reputation, Putin did not see fit to respond in person until the 25th. Nor has he responded to any of the evidence presented, including documentation from his own former colleague, released to the public over a decade ago. 
I also cannot help noticing that Putin’s interview took place on state-controlled Rossiya 1, where journalists like Nailya Asker-Zade are known to give favourable interviews to members of his government. Why won’t Putin give an interview to newspapers like The Moscow Times, or Телеканал Дождь? 
Could it be that journalists at those outlets have watched Navalny’s documentation in full and would ask more detailed questions, for which a blanket denial will not suffice as an answer? 
I agree with lawyer Lyubov Sobol, who tweeted, “Putin could not ignore what the whole country is discussing.” (Translation from The Guardian). 
Despite Dmitri Peskov assuring us that the Kremlin does not fear Navalny, that not many people came to Saturday’s protests, and that many people vote for Putin, the fact that the Russian President had to appear before his people to deny owning a multi-billion rouble secret palace shows the Kremlin’s increasing panic as it loses contol of the country. 
May it be so! 
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Expert Survey: Will the Outcome of Russia’s Elections Impact Its Foreign Policy? [With Andrei Kolesnikov, Tatyana Stanovaya, Angela Stent, Denis Volkov]
Expert Survey: Will the Outcome of Russia’s Elections Impact Its Foreign Policy? [With Andrei Kolesnikov, Tatyana Stanovaya, Angela Stent, Denis Volkov]
(Russia Matters – russiamatters.org – Sept. 24, 2021) The ruling United Russia party retained a two-thirds majority in the lower house of Russia’s parliament, the State Duma, following elections that have been criticized as neither free nor fair by Russia’s opposition and the West. United Russia came away with 50% of the vote that took place Sept. 17-19, winning 324 seats in the lower chamber,…
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tkmedia · 3 years
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Dressel: A new Olympic Record in 100m freestyle
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Caeleb Dressel climbed atop the lane rope, a look of wonder in his eyes. He gazed all around the Tokyo Aquatics Centre, eager to soak up every last moment of something he's never done before. Win an individual gold medal at the Olympics.The most dominant swimmer of the post-Michael Phelps era filled in the last hole on his resume, winning a gold all by himself with two furious laps of the pool Thursday.Dressel, whose three previous golds were all on relays, lived up to the hype at an Olympics where several U.S. stars have faltered."I knew that weight was on my shoulders," he said after a nail-biting victory in the 100-meter freestyle over defending champion Kyle Chalmers of Australia.Katie Ledecky got another shot at Ariarne Titmus, but this time neither won gold. China knocked off both the Americans and the Australians with a world-record performance in the 4x200-meter freestyle relay.All three teams went faster than the previous mark, but it was China that earned the second world record of the Tokyo Games despite a blistering anchor leg from Ledecky.
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Caeleb Dressel of the United States poses with his gold medal for the men's 100-meter freestyle.AP"I wasn't as nervous maybe and knew I was going to let it go and go for it each lap of that race," said Ledecky, who went faster than anyone but couldn't quite catch the Chinese, winding up with her second silver of the Games.Dressel was golden. As is his style, the 24-year-old Floridian dived into the pool and popped out of the water with the lead. He was still ahead at the lone flip, and grittily turned away Chalmers' bid for a second straight gold.Dressel's winning time was an Olympic record of 47.02 seconds - a mere six-hundredths ahead of Chalmers, who had to settle for a silver this time."I wasn't worried about anything," Dressel said. "During the race there's only so much you can do. Whatever's going to happen is going to happen. I stuck to my race plan so if it got me first, OK, if it got me second, OK."The two have developed quite a rivalry. Chalmers won at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games, where Dressel was sixth, but the American won the last two world championships, with Chalmers finishing second in 2019."We do enjoy racing against each other and we do bring the best out of each other," Chalmers said. "It's almost a relief to get it done with now."The bronze was claimed by Russian swimmer Kliment Kolesnikov (47.44), who added to his silver in the 100 backstroke.
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Caeleb Dressel of the United States starts in the men's 100-meter freestyle final.APThe first three gold medals of Dressel's career were all in the relays - two in Rio, another in the 4x100 free relay at the Tokyo Games.Now, he's got one of his own. "It is a lot different. I guess I thought it would be, I just didn't want to admit to it," he said. "It's a lot tougher. You have to rely on yourself, there's no one to bail you out."After Phelps retired, Dressel emerged as the world's dominant swimmer. He turned in staggering performances at the last two world championships, earning seven gold medals at Budapest in 2017, followed by a six-gold, two-silver performance at Gwangju in 2019.As important as those meets were, they're not the Olympics. Dressel knew he needed an individual gold to solidify his legacy. From his perch on the lane rope, he cherished the significance of his victory. "These moments are a lot different than worlds," Dressel conceded.Dressel's gold was the second of the morning for the Americans, who got a surprise victory from Bobby Finke in the Olympic debut of the men's 800 free.
Also winning golds
Australia's Izaac Stubblety-Cook in the men's 200 breaststroke and China's Zhang Yufei in the women's 200 butterfly.Zhang returned to swim a leg on the 4x200 free relay, joining Yang Junxuan, Tang Muhan and closer Li Bingjie for a winning time of 7:40.33. That broke the previous record of 7:41.50 set by Australia at the 2019 world championships.
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Zhang Yufei of China swims in the women's 200-meter butterfly final.APLedecky took the final leg for the Americans, diving into the water in third place - nearly 2 seconds behind Li and also trailing Australia's Leah Neale. She quickly zipped by Neale and closed the gap significantly on Li, but couldn't quite catch her at the end.China's surprising win denied both Ledecky and Ariarne Titmus another gold medal. After winning both the 200 and 400 free individual titles, the Terminator led off for Australia but was a bit sluggish; she was more than a second slower than her gold medal performance in the 200.Ledecky had finished second to Titmus in the 400 and didn't even win a medal in the 200, finally claiming her first Tokyo gold in the debut of the women's 1,500 free.She got another silver in the relay, but certainly had nothing to be ashamed of. Her split time of 1:53.76 was the fastest of the race. She simply ran out of time to catch Li as the Americans finished in 7:40.73. Australia took the bronze in 7:41.29.Finke pulled out his victory with a dazzling burst on the final lap. Making the final turn in fourth, he turned on the speed at the end of the 16-lap race, passing all three swimmers ahead of him to take the gold. Finke's final 50 was 26.39 - nearly 2 seconds faster than anyone else.
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China's women's 4x200-meter freestyle relay team.AP"I had no idea I was going to do that," said Finke, whose winning time of 7:41.87 was just 0.24 ahead of Italy's Gregorio Paltrinieri, with Mykhailo Romanchuk of Ukraine (7:42.33) taking the bronze.Mirroring Finke's finish, albeit over a much shorter distance, Stubblety-Cook rallied on the final lap to pass Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands, who went out fast but couldn't quite hang on.The winning time was an Olympic-record 2:06.38, giving the team from Down Under its fifth gold of the swimming competition - and its first men's breaststroke gold since Ian O'Brien at the 1964 Tokyo Games.Stubblety-Cook was surprised as anyone to be standing on the top step of podium."I was happy enough just to be here," he said. "Honestly, I'm just pretty lost for words at the moment. It's still all sinking in."Kamminga was under world-record pace through the first 150 meters, but he faded to the silver in 2:07.01. The bronze went to Finland's Matti Mattsson in 2:07.24.
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Caeleb Dressel of the United States swims in the men's 100-meter freestyle final.APDressel's victory pulled the Americans ahead of the Aussies with six golds in Tokyo. They also lead the overall medal tally with 21, nine ahead of their rivals.Zhang had a remarkable session. She turned in a dominating performance to win China's first swimming gold of the Tokyo Games in the 200 butterfly. Her Olympic-record time of 2:03.86 put her more than a body length ahead of the pair of Americans, Regan Smith and Hali Flickinger.The U.S. swimmers dueled back and forth for the silver, with Smith pulling ahead at the end to touch in 2:05.30. Flickinger earned the bronze in 2:05.65.About an hour later, Zhang returned to the pool to win another gold in the freestyle relay. Read the full article
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tt02 · 3 years
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Nina Kraviz - Skyscrapers by Nina Kraviz I wrote "Skyscrapers" on one of my long trips to a far away country. It is a love song. It is about missing someone very much even if you don't always get along and agree on things. In moments like that you just want to run away .. as fast as you can .. only to feel like you want to come back 5 minutes later.. credits - written, produced and performed by Nina Kraviz mixing - Nina Kraviz, Tobias Freund and Denis Kolesnikov vocal recording - Denis Kolesnikov mastering - Denis Kolesnikov
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ivisitlondon · 3 years
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iVisit... Hayward Gallery to reopen and new events for Southbank Centre’s Inside Out series are announced
The Southbank Centre announces that the Hayward Gallery will reopen on 19 May, with two much-anticipated, solo exhibitions by Matthew Barney and Igshaan Adams.
The announcement comes as a new slate of events for Inside Out, an online season of music and literature are released. This next instalment of the popular digital series will see the Southbank Centre’s Resident Orchestras performing at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, marking the first time the much-loved venue has been open since it closed last March due to Covid-19.
The orchestras are joined by a roster of leading international artists, including conductors Ben Gernon, Enrique Mazzola, Fabien Gabel, Robin Ticciati, Rory MacDonald, Ryan Bancroft and Sir Mark Elder and soloists Alexandra Dariescu, Denis Kozhukhin, Paul Lewis, Pavel Kolesnikov and Steven Isserlis.
A further series of Inside Out events will be announced in the coming weeks. The Southbank Centre’s reopening plans will then be announced in due course, subject to government guidance.
Gillian Moore CBE, Director of Music and Performing Arts, Southbank Centre, says: “We’re making a very warm welcome back to our orchestral partners this Spring for our ongoing Inside Out series. It’s going to be wonderful to see them back in the Southbank Centre doing what they do best, performing much-loved music with world-class conductors and soloists. We know these events will continue to bring a little bit of light into our homes as we look forward to reopening our shared spaces later this year.”
HAYWARD GALLERY:
Matthew Barney: Redoubt
19 May – 25 July 2021
From 19 May through 25 July 2021 the Hayward Gallery presents Matthew Barney: Redoubt, an exhibition of the renowned artist and filmmaker’s latest body of work. The exhibition, the artist’s first major museum show in the UK in over a decade, presents a group of monumental sculptures, and more than forty engravings and electroplated copper plates. Also included is the UK premiere of Barney’s new eponymous film, a ‘breathtakingly beautiful’ chronicle that explores the complex relationships between humans, and the natural world. Set in the sublime wintry landscape of Idaho’s Sawtooth Mountain range, the feature-length film intertwines themes of artistic creation in a contemporary reworking of the classical myth of Diana and Actaeon.
Redoubt presents a major new direction in Barney’s practice, and advances his notable shift in materials over the past decade, from the plastic and petroleum jelly of his earlier works to the cast metals that figured prominently in River of Fundament, 2014. With Redoubt, Barney combines traditional casting methods and new digital technologies in an unprecedented way to create artworks of formal and material complexity as well as narrative density. The four large-scale sculptures in the exhibition derive from trees harvested from a burned forest in the Sawtooth Mountains. Formed out of molten copper and brass, the unique casts incorporate enlarged militarised elements, giving the sculptures a hybridised aesthetic that is both imposing and intricate.
Matthew Barney: Redoubt was originally organised by the Yale University Art Gallery.
Igshaan Adams: Kicking Dust
19 May – 25 July 2021
In May 2021, the Hayward Gallery presents the first solo exhibition in the UK of South African artist Igshaan Adams (b. 1982). The 2018 winner of the prestigious Standard Bank Young Artist Award, Igshaan Adams lives and works in Cape Town. The artist’s cross-disciplinary practice combines aspects of weaving, sculpture and installation whilst exploring concerns related to race, religion and sexuality.
The exhibition consists largely of new work produced during an artist residency Adams undertook at the A4 Foundation in Cape Town and on the occasion of the show. Presented as a single immersive environment with suspended sculptures, large-scale floor based weavings and tapestries hung on the wall, the installation responds to Hayward’s iconic Brutalist gallery space. Each work, and the exhibition as a whole, is composed of multiple patterns that explore the potential of woven material to reflect not only the multiplicities of Adams’ own identity but of broader cultural interchange.
RESIDENT ORCHESTRAS:
The London Philharmonic Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra, and London Sinfonietta return to the Southbank Centre in March and April for streamed concerts featuring world-renowned conductors and soloists, as well as programming for young people. The events announced today will run to 28 April, with subsequent digital programming from 28 April onwards to be announced in due course. Tickets will be available to the general public from 2pm on Friday 5 March.
The London Philharmonic Orchestra presents six concerts filmed by Intersection (formerly Silent Studios) which will be available for audiences to watch for free on Marquee.tv from 24 March. The concerts will be streamed every Wednesday at 8pm from 24 March and will feature conductors Enrique Mazzola, Robin Ticciati and Sir Mark Elder, as well as soloists Steven Isserlis, Denis Kozhukhin and Alexandra Dariescu. Programme details for later concerts will soon be revealed but will include two of the Orchestra’s titled conductors Karina Canellakis and Vladimir Jurowski, who conducts his final concerts at the Royal Festival Hall before stepping into the Conductor Emeritus role.
Tickets will be free for the first seven days after broadcast and concerts will be captured before their premiere date.
The Philharmonia Orchestra presents two global streams to be presented on the orchestra’s own dedicated channel. On Thursday 25 March, the Philharmonia will be joined by conductor Ryan Bancroft and pianist Paul Lewis for Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 27 and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5. On Thursday 1 April, Rory MacDonald will then lead the orchestra for a programme of Tchaikovsky and Sibelius, with Pavel Kolesnikov performing Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1.
Tickets start at £10 and concerts will be captured before their premiere date.
The London Sinfonietta’s ‘Sound Out Online’ is the orchestra’s annual concert for children and young people and goes online for the first time to bring pupils closer to iconic contemporary music from the past century (22 March). As part of the orchestra’s Composition Challenges scheme, the concert features new works submitted by young people, as the London Sinfonietta continues to inspire a new generation of composers to get creative with classical music.
This event is free and will be streamed live on YouTube, exclusively for the Southbank Centre on Monday 22 March from 2 – 2.50pm. It is designed for Key Stage 2.
Previously announced online music and literature events as part of Inside Out include Skin (4 Mar), Black Country, New Road (6 Mar), London Contemporary Orchestra (19 Mar), Bell Orchestre (13 Mar), Hanif Abdurraquib (25 Mar), Out-Spoken (28 Mar), Kazuo and Naomi Ishiguro (5 Apr), Olivia Laing (30 Apr) and Jhumpa Lahiri (6 May). Tickets are onsale.
Elsewhere at the Southbank Centre:
WINTER LIGHT
Winter Light (extended until 28 March) is a free open-air exhibition that enlivens the site’s iconic buildings and the Riverside Walk with luminous, playful and thought-provoking artworks during the darkest months of the year. Featuring a range of leading international artists, Winter Light includes artworks, new commissions and a series of poems that make ingenious use of light, colour and animation whilst touching on diverse concerns.
At a time when we view so much of the world through digital screens, the artists in this exhibition celebrate how the medium of light can transform our physical spaces. Their artworks also explore ideas about nature, politics and society, gender, aesthetics and the act of looking. Winter Light includes artworks by artists including: Simeon Barclay, David Batchelor, James Clar, Shezad Dawood, Kota Ezawa, Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Suzie Larke, Tala Madani, Tatsuo Miyajima, Louiza Ntourou, Katie Paterson, Jini Reddy, Tavares Strachan, Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum, Emma Talbot and Toby Ziegler.
IMAGINE A STORY
Coinciding with World Book Day, the Southbank Centre is inviting 40 primary schools to take part in this year’s creative writing project Imagine a Story, giving young children the chance to become published authors. Children’s author Zanib Mian and illustrator Selom Sunu are collaborating on the project, which is open to classes of Key Stage 2 children (years 3 – 6), with online applications closing Sunday 14 March.
In this project inspired by a ‘game of consequences’ each school group writes one segment of a creative story based on a framework devised by Zanib Mian (Planet Omar: Operation Kind – published for World Book Day 2021; Planet Omar: Incredible Rescue Mission; Planet Omar: Unexpected Super Spy), the author of brilliant and diverse children’s fiction, who will inspire them to develop their collaborative work in classrooms to support their development and personal wellbeing.
These chapters will then be combined into a collection of short stories and professionally published by the Southbank Centre, with illustrations by Selom Sunu (Ghost; Patina; Sunny; Lu; Look Both Ways) Zanib Mian and Selom Sunu will read the final stories which will be live-streamed to participating primary school classrooms in July and each child will receive a copy of the published book.
In addition, the Southbank Centre’s nationwide participation programme, Art by Post has been shortlisted for "Award for the Best Larger Social Prescribing Project" as part of the Social Prescribing Network Awards. The ceremony is on 4 March with winners to be announced from 3.30 – 5pm.
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fadedday · 7 months
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Photography by Denis Kolesnikov
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collageofnudes · 2 months
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Ksenia Anike by Denis Kolesnikov
part 2 / 3 (part 1 , part 3)
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interkomitet · 3 years
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Elena Panina was amazed at the claims of the Baltic countries on human rights
The desire of the Baltic countries and Poland to act as guardians of human rights can only cause amazement, since it is there that the most real political repression and persecution of freedom of speech have been going on for many years, says Elena Panina, a member of the State Duma’s international affairs committee.
Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and Poland draw up their own sanctions list of persons who, in their opinion, are responsible for the arrest of Alexei Navalny upon his return to Russia and the sentencing of him, the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry said earlier.
In an interview with RIA Novosti, Panina noted that such actions are quite natural, since the ruling circles of these particular countries have long turned into a kind of “watchdog” of the collective West.
The politician also noted that it is in one of these countries – Estonia – that the fugitive Russian businessman Sergei Kolesnikov is “based”, who appeared in Navalny’s film about the “palace” in Gelendzhik as one of the main “witnesses.”
According to the parliamentarian, it was he who “the inventor of the odious fake” about the “palace in Gelendzhik”, which served as a source of “creativity” for the notorious film by Navalny. Back in 2010, Kolesnikov sent a letter to then-president Dmitry Medvedev, in which he claimed that a “recreation complex” of Vladimir Putin was being built on the Black Sea coast. This statement was denied by Putin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov in the same year. “In general, the striving of the Baltic countries and Poland to act as guardians of human rights can only cause amazement. In all these states for many years there have been real political repressions, persecutions of freedom of speech, witch hunts. It is not surprising that their representatives are used for the most aggressive and boorish attacks against Russia “, – stated Panina.
Businessman Arkady Rotenberg earlier said that he is the beneficiary of a complex of buildings in the Gelendzhik area, on Cape Idokopas, and the “palace” belongs to him, work on creating an apart-hotel there has been going on for several years. Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that he had not watched the film about the “palace” in Gelendzhik, since he did not have time, but had flipped through the videos that his assistants brought him. He noted that none of the property from the “investigation” belonged or belonged to either him or his relatives. The press secretary of the head of state Dmitry Peskov noted that the Kremlin had known for a long time about the impending pseudo exposures and information attacks on the president, which are designed to rock the situation.
http://interkomitet.com/about-the-committee/blogs/elena-panina/elena-panina-was-amazed-at-the-claims-of-the-baltic-countries-on-human-rights/
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haber-zeynart · 4 years
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Misli.com'da günün canlı maç yayınları
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Maçları Misli.com'da CANLI İZLE! Canlı iddaa kaybına %10'a varan iade... Almanya Bundesliga, İspanya La Liga ve Portekiz Primeira başta olmak üzere hafta sonları da Avusturya Ligi ve Yunansitan Ligi ile keyfine keyif kat, her gün onlarca Masa Tenisi maçı da CANLI YAYINLA Misli.com'da! İşte günün maçları...İşte günün CANLI YAYIN listesi...15:00 LP Andreev, Danila - Petrov, Vladimir 15:00 LP Kolesnikov, Dmitriy - Troyanov, Yaroslav 15:00 LP Ogay, Sergey - Petrochenko, Dmitry 15:30 LP Buyanin, Ivan - Shirokov, Vladimir 15:30 LP Kirilenko, Andrey - Bazilevsky, Vitaly 15:30 LP Pravednov, Andrey - Sayanov, Denis 16:00 LP Petrochenko, Dmitry - Pravednov, Andrey 16:00 LP Petrov, Vladimir - Buyanin, Ivan 16:00 LP Troyanov, Yaroslav - Kirilenko, Andrey 16:30 LP Bazilevsky, Vitaly - Kolesnikov, Dmitriy 16:30 LP Sayanov, Denis - Ogay, Sergey 16:30 LP Shirokov, Vladimir - Andreev, Danila 17:00 LP Andreev, Danila - Buyanin, Ivan 17:00 LP Kolesnikov, Dmitriy - Kirilenko, Andrey 19:30 AL1 Eintracht Frankfurt - Schalke 04 19:30 AL2 Erzgebirge Aue - Bochum 19:30 AL2 Hannover 96 - Saint Pauli 19:30 AL2 Jahn Regensburg - Karlsruhe 19:30 AL2 Stuttgart - Sandhausen 20:30 İS1 Eibar - Athletic Bilbao 20:30 İS1 Real Valladolid - Celta Vigo 21:00 PO1 P. Ferreira - Belenenses 21:30 AL1 Augsburg - Hoffenheim 21:30 AL1 B. Dortmund - Mainz 21:30 AL1 B. Leverkusen - Köln 21:30 AL1 Leipzig - F. Read the full article
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RUSSIALINK: “Pragmatic Paternalism: The Russian Public and the Private Sector” – Carnegie Moscow/ Andrei Kolesnikov, Denis Volkov "Russians have a dream for their children and their grandchildren of a different environment that is favorable for entrepreneurship and private initiatives.
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swimmersdaily · 6 years
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2017 European Short Course Swimming Championships, Copenhagen (DEN)
Golden finish for Sjostrom and the Italians
Three titles in two hours secured a worthy end of the magnificent season of Sweden’s Sarah Sjostrom. Italy also clinched three golds on the closing day which helped them to retain the Championship Trophy. Russia topped the medal table with nine golds as their medley relay crowned the meet in the Royal Arena by winning the men’s title with a new world record.
Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
SJOESTROEM Sarah SWE Gold Medal MEN – 100 M BUTTERFLY – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
VALL MONTERO Jessica ESP Gold Medal PEDERSEN Rikke Moeller DEN Silver Medal LECLUYSE Fanny BEL Bronze Medal WOMEN – 200 M BREASTSTROKE – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
DOTTO Luca ITA Gold Medal TIMMERS Pieter BEL Silver Medal SCOTT Duncan W GBR Bronze Medal MEN – 100 M FREESTYLE – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
SJOESTROEM Sarah SWE Gold Medal WATTEL Marie FRA Silver Medal BECKMANN Emilie DEN Bronze Medal WOMEN – 100 M BUTTERFLY – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
ORSI Marco ITA Gold Medal FESIKOV Sergei RUS Silver Medal STOLK Kyle NED Bronze Medal MEN – 100 M MEDLEY – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
KAPAS Boglarka HUN Gold Medal KOEHLER Sarah GER Silver Medal HASSLER Julia LIE Bronze Medal WOMEN – 400 M FREESTYLE – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
SABBIONI Simone ITA Gold Medal MEN – 50 M BACKSTROKE – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
SJOESTROEM Sarah SWE Gold Medal KROMOWIDJOJO Ranomi NED Silver Medal BLUME Pernille DEN Bronze Medal WOMEN – 50 M FREESTYLE – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
SABBIONI Simone ITA Gold Medal KOLESNIKOV Kliment RUS Silver Medal STRAVIUS Jeremy FRA Bronze Medal MEN – 50 M BACKSTROKE – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
RUSSIA Gold Medal ITALY Silver Medal BELARUS Bronze Medal MEN – 4X50 M MEDLEY – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
RUSSIA Team Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
SWEDEN Gold Medal WOMEN – 4X50 M MEDLEY – FINAL Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto © Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia
Luca DOTTO ITA Gold Medal 100 freestyle Men Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto Andrea Staccioli / Insidefoto / Deepbluemedia
Team ITALY Squadra ITALIA Copenhagen 17-12-2017 Royal Arena LEN European Short Course Swimming Championships – Campionati Europei nuoto vasca corta Foto Andrea Staccioli / Insidefoto / Deepbluemedia
Sarah Sjostrom’s season ended in style: the Swedish superstar, who already earned the best female swimmer’s award from FINA after her glorious summer, finally captured gold in Copenhagen too. Three in a single session, in fact. After slight struggles in her earlier events, including a bowing-out from the 50m fly final, she stroke gold in her trademark event, the 100m fly, drew luck to her side in the 50m free and helped Sweden to an unexpected triumph in the women’s medley relay.
In the fly she was a cut above rest, claimed her third straight title by a 0.97sec winning margin. The 50m free was the usual tight affair between Sjostrom and Ranomi Kromowidjojo – two years ago the Dutch out-touched the Swede by 0.07sec in Netanya, this time the tiniest gap possible (0.01) separated them but it favoured Sjostrom here. Then came the medley relay where Sjostrom rocketed Sweden in front over the fly leg and they kept the advantage till the end.
Italians also had something to cheer for in the closing session. The previous two days saw a great medal boost, Italians earned eight on Friday and Saturday in total but none of them were gold (four silver and bronze respectively). However, on Sunday they made up the missed ones, rushed to three back-to-back titles which helped them to clinch Championship Tropgy once again.
Luca Dotto did a clean job and retained Italy’s title in the 100m free – the 2015 winner Marco Orsi, after a sickness-forced transformation, came first in the 100m IM. Then came an upset as Simone Sabbioni denied Russia’s teenage sensation Kliment Kolesnikov’s backstroke triple by out-touching him in the 50m back by 0.02sec.
The young Russian, winner of the 100m and 200m titles, got some consolation soon in the men’s 4x50m medley relay when he was 0.3sec faster in the opening leg than he was in the individual final, clocking a way better time and posting another junior world record. The relay cracked the senior world record, securing a worthy ending to the meet.
This crowned the Russians’ performance too: just as in the last edition in Denmark (Herning 2013) they topped the medal table. Another gold was delivered by Aleksandr Kharlanov in the 200m fly where title-holder Laszlo Cseh came only fifth, leaving the Royal Arena empty-handed (for him Denmark brought bad luck as Herning and Copenhagen are the only events in his 15 year-long carrier where he didn’t win any medals).
Hungary came second behind the Russians with a slightly weaker medal-haul than they achieved in Netanya which had put them atop in 2015. Though the 6-time champion Katinka Hosszu enjoyed a rest day, the Magyars still celebrated a victory, courtesy of Boglarka Kapas. The four-time European champion of London 2016 left behind her ‘short-course demons’ and finally stepped on the top of the podium for the first time in her career. She won a fine duel against the 800m victor Sarah Koehler (GER) in the 400m free. History was made in this event as Julia Hassler got the first-ever major international medal for Liechtenstein by finishing third.
Spain also got its first gold after Jessica Vall Montero won the women’s 200m breast. Former ruler of the event, Rikke Moller Pedersen heated up the stands by clinching silver – and the capacity crowd of 6,500 also loudly cheered for the bronze-medal winning swim of Pernille Blume in the 50m free and the Danish medley relay’s silver. The hosts finished with 3 silvers and 4 bronzes – though in the pool they didn’t earn gold but at the stands, the future generation got two: Adam Peaty’s generous gesture on the previous day was repeated by Sarah Sjostrom who also gave one of her golds to an amazed youngster in the front rows, setting a kind of tradition for inspiring the future generations.
Copenhagen will be remembered for this and several other reasons as the event goes down as one of the best ever in LEN history. European Aquatics now head to Glasgow, site of the following long-course Europeans in August 2018 and the next short-course Europeans in December 2019.
Press release from LEN, photos courtesy of Deepbluemedia / Giorgio Scala
LEN 2017 European SC Championships – Day 5 2017 European Short Course Swimming Championships, Copenhagen (DEN) Golden finish for Sjostrom and the Italians Three titles in two hours secured a worthy end of the magnificent season of Sweden’s Sarah Sjostrom.
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