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My Life with Boris

My Life with Boris

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Yes, I understand," said Kohl. "We, Western Germany, invested so many resources into Eastern Germany but still have not been able to solve all the problems." Kirillov, Vladimir (2002). "Khrunichev Center – Leader of the Russian Space Sector". Eksport Vooruzheniy. Centre for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies (3). Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 . Retrieved 15 May 2007. Naina Iosifowna Jelcyna (ros. Наина Иосифовна Ельцина; ur. 14 marca 1932 w w obwodzie orenburskim) – żona Borysa Jelcyna (wdowa od 2007) i pierwsza dama Federacji Rosyjskiej w latach 1991–1999. (pl) In 2001, Tatyana married her fellow presidential adviser Valentin Yumashev, [16] and flew to London to have a baby, daughter Maria. [17] Until 2018, Yumashev was the father-in-law of oligarch Oleg Deripaska. [18] Naina Yeltsina was rarely seen in public. She accompanied her husband on some of his foreign visits including 1997 visits to Sweden [1] and Finland [2] and a 1999 visit to China. [3] As a rule, Naina Yeltsina never interfered in her husband's political work; however, in the 1996 election campaign, she met with voters and gave interviews to the media. [4] She made a major public appearance in April 2007 at her husband's state funeral in Moscow.

Boris Yeltsin’s widow Naina Yeltsina speaking at the opening ceremony of the Boris Yeltsin Presidential Centre On 25 January 2015, the Boris Yeltsin Presidential Center opened in Yekaterinburg. [11] See also [ edit ] Yeltsin made her his personal advisor in 1996 when his re-election campaign was faltering. [5] A memoir written by Yeltsin, as reported by The New York Times, [6] credited her with advising against "banning Communist Party, dissolving Parliament and postponing presidential elections" in 1996. She was particularly influential as Yeltsin recovered from heart surgery in late 1996. She became the keystone in a small group of advisors known as "The Family", although the others ( Alexander Voloshin and Valentin Yumashev) were not Yeltsin relatives. [7] Boris Berezovsky and other oligarchs were often included in the group as well. In 1980, Yeltsina married fellow Moscow State University student, Vilen Ayratovich Khairullin. In 1981, they had a son, Boris. They divorced in 1982. [13] Anastasia „Naina“ Iossifowna Jelzina (russisch Анастасия "Наина" Иосифовна Ельцина; * 14. März 1932 in , Oblast Orenburg, Russische SFSR, Sowjetunion als Anastasia Iossifowna Girina) war von 1956 bis 2007 die Ehefrau des ersten russischen Präsidenten, Boris Nikolajewitsch Jelzin. Als solche war sie vom 10. Juli 1991 bis zum 31. Dezember 1999 First Lady Russlands. (de)

In those years Russia began to participate in summits of world leaders. First it was the G7, in which Russia was invited. Later, Russia was also included in the informal club of great powers: the G7 became the G8. A total of 12 foreign leaders, 16 former leaders, 4 governmental delegates and 3 multilateral leaders attended the funeral. In total, 50 countries and 3 organizations was represented. Due Diligence, Business Intelligence, Asset Retrieval, Debt Recovery in Europe, FSU, USA and worldwide". www.templetonthorp.com. Archived from the original on 22 October 2007 . Retrieved 15 May 2007.

On the day Yeltsin died, President Vladimir Putin declared the day of his funeral, held on 25 April 2007, [2] to be a day of national mourning. The ceremony was broadcast live on the main Russian state TV channels, and was attended by current and former heads of state, with a number of them expressing their condolences. The lowering of the coffin into the grave was accompanied by an artillery salute. Naina Yeltsina was born in the Orenburg Oblast in 1932. After graduating from the construction faculty at the Ural Polytechnic Institute in Sverdlovsk in 1955, she worked with various projects at the Sverdlovsk Institute. In 1956, she married Boris Yeltsin, whom she met at the institute, and has lived in Moscow since 1985. They have two daughters, Yelena and Tatyana, born in 1957 and 1960, respectively.Yeltsin was memorialised in several ways in 2008. On 8 April, a street in Yekaterinburg, formerly 9 January Street, was renamed "Boris Yeltsin Street". On 23 April, a grand opening ceremony at Novodevichy Cemetery was held for the monument to Boris Yeltsin, made by sculptor Georgy Frangulyan. The memorial is a broad headstone, made in the colors of the Russian flag – a white marble, blue Byzantine mosaics and red porphyry. On the pavement under the tricolor is an engraved Orthodox cross. The ceremony was attended by Yeltsin's family, including his widow, Naina, Russian President Vladimir Putin, the president-elect Dmitry Medvedev, Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov, Chief of Staff of the Presidential Executive Office Sergey Sobyanin, government members, friends, colleagues and others who worked with Yelstin. On the same day, the name of the Ural State Technical University was changed to include "Boris Yeltsin". [10]

Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.During travels the president's schedule was very rigid: official meetings, negotiations, signing documents. For some reason it’s usually thought that heads of state just put their signatures on documents, which have already been prepared by diplomats and assistants. This is not so. His assistants told the president the position of the ministries and departments. They presented information, agreed on document projects. But the most important things would happen later, behind closed doors, when assistants and journalists would leave. It was not clear until the last minute whether the heads of state would come to an agreement or not. embarked on a completely new development scenario, a period of economic freedom for the country, with all the Naína Iósifovna Yéltsina (Oremburgo, 14 de marzo de 1932) es una ingeniera y política rusa. Fue la primera dama de la Federación Rusa entre 1991 y 1999. Es la viuda del primer presidente de Rusia, Borís Yeltsin. (es) Rescuing Boris". Time. 15 July 1996. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 . Retrieved 15 May 2007.



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