Yavlinsky
says Russian security taps phones, bullies supporters
By David Sands, THE WASHINGTON TIMES, June
23, 2000
Grigory Yavlinsky, Russia's best-known liberal
politician, Thursday accused the country's internal-security
forces of tapping his telephones and trying to coerce
supporters to spy on him.
Opportunities
and risks for democratisation in today's Russia. Speech
of Grigory Yavlinsky
The Liberal, Democrat and Reformers'
Group of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe.
Seminar "Politics in Russia".
June 22, 1997
Accusations
That Moscow Spies on Party Gain Weight
By MICHAEL WINES, The New York Times, June
21, 2000
MOSCOW, June 21 -- Against a backdrop of legal
assaults on tycoons, harassment of free-thinking
journalists and a general tightening of the state
grip on things, Russia's leading pro-democracy political
party now says federal intelligence agents are spying
on it.
FSB
Orders Students to Spy on Yabloko
By Vladimir KovalyevThe Moscow Times June
21, 2000
ST. PETERSBURG -- The Yabloko political movement
says federal agents approached two students active
in its ranks and gave them an ultimatum: Spy on
Yabloko from within, or find yourself sent off to
fight in Chechnya. The students at St. Petersburg's
Baltic State University, Dmitry Barkovsky and Konstantin
Suzdal, have laid out their allegations in a letter
posted on Yabloko's web site .
Interview
of Grigory Yavlinsky on Sergei Dorenko’s programme
ORT channel, Interviewer -Sergey Dorenko, June
17, 2000
But today I wanted to say the following: you see
that today even Zyuganov has been defending NTV. And
tomorrow Zyuganov will defend you, if they try again
to do to you the same thing they did when they turned
you out of the studio and you were not allowed to
work. And why is this happening?
Sergei
Ivanenko: ordinary citizens may follow Vladimir Gusinsky-s
way
The arrest of the head of the Media-Most
holding company, Vladimir Gusinsky, is obviously politically
motivated.
Briefing
of Grigory Yavlinsky on the visit of US President
Bill Clinton to Moscow
June 6, 2000, Moscow, the State Duma
Grigory Yavlinsky: The main purpose
of the visit of the President of the United States
to Moscow was to discuss issues related to the anti-missile
defence system. I think that these talks should be
continued with President Clinton until the elections
in the US, and then with the new President of the
United States.
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