Home
$1 =
 27.5715 RUR
+0.1302
€1 =
 34.4975 RUR
-0.1718
Moscow
34º F / 1º C 
snow
St.Petersburg
32º F / 0º C 
dull
Search the Archives:
Today is Nov. 21, 2008 8:40 PM (GMT +0300) Moscow
Forum  |  Archive  |  Photo  |  Advertising  |  Subscribe  |  Search  |  PDA  |  RUS
REGIONS OF RUSSIA
E-mail  |  Home
   // Republics
   // Adygea, Republic of  >>
   // Altai (Gorno-Altai), Republic of  >>
   // Bashkortostan, Republic of  >>
   // Buryatia, Republic of  >>
   // Chechnya, Republic of  >>
   // Chuvashia, Republic of  >>
   // Dagestan, Republic of  >>
   // Ingushetia, Republic of  >>
   // Kabardino-Balkaria, Republic of  >>
   // Kalmykia, Republic of  >>
   // Karachayevo-Cherkessia, Republic of  >>
   // Karelia, Republic of  >>
   // Khakassia, Republic of  >>
   // Komi, Republic of  >>
   // Mari El, Republic of  >>
   // Mordovia, Republic of  >>
   // North Ossetia, Republic of  >>
   // Sakha (Yakutia), Republic of  >>
   // Tatarstan, Republic of  >>
   // Tuva, Republic of  >>
   // Udmurtia, Republic of  >>
   // Territories (Krai)
   // Altai Territory  >>
   // Khabarovsk Territory  >>
   // Krasnodar Territory  >>
   // Krasnoyarsk Territory  >>
   // Primorye (Maritime) Territory  >>
   // Stavropol Territory  >>
   // Regions
   // Amur Region  >>
   // Arkhangelsk Region  >>
   // Astrakhan Region  >>
   // Belgorod Region  >>
   // Bryansk Region  >>
   // Chelyabinsk Region  >>
   // Chita Region  >>
   // Irkutsk Region  >>
   // Ivanovo Region  >>
   // Kaliningrad Region  >>
   // Kaluga Region  >>
   // Kamchatka Region
   // Kemerovo Region  >>
   // Kirov Region  >>
   // Kostroma Region  >>
   // Kurgan Region  >>
   // Kursk Region  >>
   // Leningrad Region  >>
   // Lipetsk Region  >>
   // Magadan Region  >>
   // Moscow Region  >>
   // Murmansk Region  >>
   // Nizhny Novgorod Region  >>
   // Novgorod Region  >>
   // Novosibirsk Region  >>
   // Omsk Region  >>
   // Orel Region  >>
   // Orenburg Region  >>
   // Penza Region  >>
   // Perm Region  >>
   // Pskov Region  >>
   // Rostov Region  >>
   // Ryazan Region  >>
   // Sakhalin Region  >>
   // Samara Region  >>
   // Saratov Region  >>
   // Smolensk Region  >>
   // Sverdlovsk Region  >>
   // Tambov Region  >>
   // Tomsk Region  >>
   // Tula Region  >>
   // Tver Region  >>
   // Tyumen Region  >>
   // Ulyanovsk Region  >>
   // Vladimir Region  >>
   // Volgograd Region  >>
   // Vologda Region  >>
   // Voronezh Region  >>
   // Yaroslavl Region  >>
   // Federal Cities
   // Moscow  >>
   // St. Petersburg  >>
   // Autonomous Areas (Okrugs)
   // Agin-Buryatia Autonomous Area  >>
   // Chukotka Autonomous Area  >>
   // Evenk Autonomous Area  >>
   // Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Area  >>
   // Komi-Permyak Autonomous Area  >>
   // Koryak Autonomous Area  >>
   // Nenets Autonomous Area  >>
   // Taimyr (Dolgan-Nenets) Autonomous Area  >>
   // Ust-Ordynsky Buryat Autonomous Area  >>
   // Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Area  >>
   // Autonomous Regions
   // Jewish Autonomous Region  >>
Readers' Opinions
You are welcome to share your opinion on the issue.
 
Kamchatka, Koryakia Escaped Separation by Inch
Over the 85-percent majority of the Kamchatka Region and Koryak Autonomous District voted yes October 23, 2005 in a referendum on their union as the Kamchatka Area. But the key intrigue was not the easily predicted result but rather the low activity of voters in Kamchatka, where attendance proved 20 percent lower than in Koryakia and only 2 percent above the required 50-percent minimum.
In Kamchatka, the required attendance of 52.03 percent was scarcely registered by 8:00 p.m., despite the lottery tickets given to the first 100,000 voters free of charge. Once the ceiling was attained, the local radio broadcasted the statement of Kamchatka’s Governor Mikhail Mashkovtsev confirming the referendum’s holding. The governor blamed the low attendance on weather conditions. “In time of the referendum, too good weather is as bad as the bad one. The people have failed to complete harvesting at their summer cottages, thinking, probably, they would have time to vote before 8:00 p.m., but never reaching the polling place as they returned too tied.”

The situation was different in Koryakia, where the referendum was acknowledged as held already by 2:00 p.m., local time, with around 54 percent of the residents voted by that hour. The overall attendance reached 76.71 percent. Koryak Governor Oleg Kozhemyako attributed such high attendance to good public spirit in the region. “For us, the union is an opportunity to integrate into a civilized society. Separated from it, we have high prices for tickets and goods and low temperatures practically all year running. So the union will enable us to make normal flights, get highly experienced medical treatment, higher education,” the governor specified.
by  www.kommersant.com

All the Article in Russian as of Oct. 24, 2005

E-mail  |  Home

Forum  |  Archives  |   Photo  |  About Us  |  Editorial  |  E-Editorial  |  Advertising  |  Subscribe  |  Subscribe to Printed Editions  |  Contact Us  |  RSS
© 1991-2008 ZAO "Kommersant. Publishing House". All rights reserved.