29 Сентября, Monday, 14:00 – We are back.
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How Much Do The Neighbors Pay?
12/31/2006 - 05:44 / Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty SETTING THE RATES: The rates former communist states paid for exported Russian natural gas in 2006 ranged from a low of $47 per 1,000 cubic meters by Belarus, to a high of $160 by Moldova. comments: 0
Minsk and Moscow are both waiting for the end of today’s negotiations with interest
12/30/2006 - 20:13 / http://www.afn.by/news/view.asp?newsid=81852 Negotiations in Moscow over gas supplies in 2007 continue between representatives of Gazprom and Belarusian delegation headed by Belarusian deputy minister of energy Eduard Taupianiets continue for already 3 hours. This round of negotiations is so much important that the majority of Gazprom top-managers stayed in company’s Namyotkin Street headquarters to wait for Belarusian delegation to arrive. comments: 0
A Happy Nation
12/30/2006 - 01:35 / Anonimous I guess I am not the only one who goes back again and again to the 19-th of March events (opposition rallies against fraudulent presidential election) in order to understand, why didn’t we have a single chance to initiate changes in Belarus? comments: 0
Belarus Heads Toward a New Year's Face-off With Putin
12/29/2006 - 14:45 / TIME.com The former Soviet republic has balked at a hike in gas rates, and Moscow has threatened to turn off the gas. Is it just business, or it Putin looking for annexation? comments: 0
The sorrows of Belarus
12/29/2006 - 07:35 / http://forum.3dway.org/viewtopic.php?t=1818 A government in exile, a country in a mess THE Belarusian National Rada, or council, seems preposterously peripheral. Via a tenuous chain of succession and inheritance it represents a Belarusian state that was founded in 1918 and existed for barely a year. It has had no surviving counterparts since similar émigré outfits, such as the Ukrainian and Polish governments-in-exile, packed up in triumph at the end of the cold war. Its self-perpetuating 80-strong assembly meets every second year. Its five “secretariats” (ministries) have neither officials to command nor taxpayers’ money to spend. Its worldly goods amount to little more than a shabby letterhead, a shambolic website, and a devoted if somewhat secretive circle of adherents made up both of diehard old émigrés, and keen youngsters from the new diaspora. comments: 0
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