Putin
to fly new presidential jetliner and enjoy more space in the Kremlin
Vladimir Kozhin
has been chairing the department for presidential affairs for
five years already. The department is currently busy with purchasing
new airliners for Russian top officials, some of whom are to be
resettled from the Kremlin. It is worthy of note that the IL-96
jetliner of the Russian president, which made headlines in Russian
media outlet in August, when it failed to take off due to a technical
malfunction, is in use again.
Test flights
of the new aircraft for Vladimir Putin revealed quite a number
of drawbacks, which had to be removed. Putin's plane was unable
to take off in Lisbon last year, apparently because of a failure
in the dash fascia. In August of the current year Putin had to
use a reserved IL-62 in Finland, when the president's airliner
was not allowed to take off because of a malfunction in the brake
system.
Other Russian
top officials, including Prime Minister Fradkov, Foreign Affairs
Minister Sergei Lavrov etc, fly similar jetliners too. The department
for presidential affairs has purchased new Tu-214 airplanes for
the politicians. "The planes have to be tested now before
Russia's leading politicians are allowed to use them for their
domestic and international flights. Tu-214 planes have been demonstrating
very good qualities so far, so we currently plan to order several
of such planes for politicians," Vladimir Kozhin said.
When the USSR
collapsed, a lot of country houses, which Soviet leaders used
for their holidays, turned out to be beyond Russia's territory.
Joseph Stalin, Leonid Brezhnev, Mikhail Gorbachev and other leaders
of the Communist Party preferred to spend their vacations in Georgia,
Ukraine and Armenia, which became independent republics after
the break-up of the Soviet Union. Vladimir Kozhin does not think
that his department needs to take any efforts to try and win those
luxury houses back. "Russia is large enough to have its own
summer residences for its leaders. There are unique objects there,
of course, but they still require considerable investments for
repairs.
The previous
government of Kyrgyzstan invited Russian leaders to return to
the resort of Issyk-Kul Lake, for example. It does have the remarkable
ecological environment with clean air, beautiful views and mineral
springs. However, the beauty of nature is the only thing to be
admired there - everything else needs to be repaired," the
head of the deparment for the presidential affairs said.
Last year
Russia agreed to pay $15 million for the former country house
of Leonid Brezhnev (one of the General Secretaries of the Soviet
Union's Communist Party) located in Ukraine. Russian authorities
paid two million dollars of the sum for the house, but the successful
completion of the transaction was put into question after the
end of the orange revolution in the country, when Viktor Yushchenko
took the office of the Ukrainian president. Yushchenko virtually
prohibited the further sale of the above-mentioned property and
ordered local authorities cancel the deal.
Russia will
chair the Group of Eight in 2006; the G8 summit is expected to
take place in Russia's St.Petersburg in the summer of the forthcoming
year. Russian authorities are currently prepare for the upcoming
international event, repairing buildings and providing all necessary
facilities to welcome international leaders in Moscow and St.Petersburg.
Vladimir Kozhin assured that residents of St.Petersburg would
not have to deal with any inconveniences during the G8 summit:
"There will be no dramatic changes made in St.Petersburg,
when the city hosts the summit.
A dismountable
press center for journalists arriving from all over the world
will appear in the city before the opening of the summit. It will
be the only construction to be built in the city on the threshold
of the summit. Anti-globalists will have an opportunity to express
their views within the framework of the law. However, "They
will not be allowed to block the central avenue of St.Petersburg
and organize a demonstration there, nor will they be allowed to
mess up the event like it happened in Genoa," Vladimir Kozhin
said.
Source:
Pravda.ru
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