Firearms in Russia - Daily Gun Policy News feed

Gun violence, gun control and small arms

Updated daily, this news feed finds articles on firearms, gun violence, gun control and small arms in Russia. For earlier articles or other countries, use Search.

United Kingdom, Lithuania, Russia

UK Criminals Kill with Lithuanian Gas Guns Converted to Fire 9mm Bullets

Times (UK)
21 July 2008

James Andre Smartt-Ford, known as Dre, was standing by the steps to the ice at Streatham rink when a black-clad youth emerged from the crowd, gripping a gun. He fired two shots from close range into his victim's back. Dre fell forward dying, his blood spreading across the ice. The revolver that killed Dre had the words "Made in Russia" imprinted close to the muzzle, and was fitted with a silencer to muffle the shots. But nothing... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Thailand, Russia

Global Gun Runner Plays US-Russia 'Cold War' Card to Escape Prison

Sydney Morning Herald
16 June 2008

The Cold War has broken out again, and Thailand suddenly finds itself caught uncomfortably in the middle of competing US and Russian interests. At the centre of the conflict is the alleged Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout, who was arrested on March 6 in Thailand and is in detention in Bangkok. The US wants Bout extradited to stand trial in New York, where he has faces charges of conspiracy to provide weapons to a foreign terrorist... ( gunpolicy.org )

World, United States, France, Canada, Germany, Angola, Thailand, Australia, Colombia, South Africa, Turkey, Pakistan, Russia, Brazil, United Kingdom, India, China

Guns Around the World: Civilian Firearms per 100 People in 16 Nations

Economist
30 April 2008

An estimated 875m small arms are in circulation worldwide: one for every seven people on the planet. Nearly three-quarters of these are owned by civilians. And about 80% of those guns in civilian hands are found in just 30 countries, according to the Small Arms Survey, a research group. Although America accounts for 40% of firearms in civilian ownership, people put them to more deadly use elsewhere. The gun murder rate in Colombia... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, United States

Russia Jails US Pastor for Smuggling, Boarding Planes With Ammunition

CNN / AP
21 April 2008

MOSCOW, Russia -- A Moscow court on Monday sentenced a U.S. pastor to more than three years in prison for smuggling hunting ammunition into Russia. Phillip Miles, from South Carolina, has been in custody since his arrest on Feb. 3. He was arrested several days after customs agents at a Moscow airport found a box of 20 rifle shells in his luggage. The court sentenced him to serve three years and two months in prison, with... ( gunpolicy.org )

Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan

Former Soviet States Plan Database of Gun Runners, Illicit Arms Dealers

BBC Monitoring Service / Interfax, Transcript
11 April 2008

A joint CIS database of transnational criminal groups involved in illegal arms trafficking will be created, the press service of the Minsk-based CIS Executive Committee has told Interfax. "This is stipulated by a draft agreement on cooperation in combating the illegal manufacturing and sale of firearms, ammunition, explosives and explosive devices, which has been discussed by the committee's expert group," the press service said.... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russian Priests Told to Carry Guns, Fight Armed Thieves of Religious Icons

Herald Sun (Melbourne)
19 March 2008

MOSCOW -- Police in a central Russian region have advised priests to apply for firearms licences so they can defend their churches from marauding thieves who have been stealing religious icons at gunpoint. But a cleric with the Russian Orthodox diocese of Kostroma said the guns would probably be wielded by church wardens because the biblical commandment "Thou shalt not kill" prohibited priests from bearing arms. Police... ( gunpolicy.org )

South Africa, Thailand, Russia, United States, Africa, World

'Merchant of Death' Gun Runner's' Secret Connections in Southern Africa

Cape Argus (Capetown)
9 March 2008

An arrest at a luxury Thailand hotel has sent shockwaves rippling through various governmental, aviation and murky arms-trade, diamond-dealing and money-laundering circles from Johannesburg and Polokwane through to Kabul, Kinshasa, Ostend and Washington. Former Johannesburg resident Viktor Bout, the man dubbed the Merchant of Death and said to have inspired the blockbuster movie The Lord of War, was arrested on Thursday in a sting... ( gunpolicy.org )

Thailand, United States, Russia, World

Coalition of Forces, US Sting Toppled Global Gun Runner Bout in Thailand

Globe & Mail (Toronto)
7 March 2008

The elusive global gunrunner dubbed the Merchant of Death has finally been captured. Viktor Bout, originally from Russia, was arrested yesterday at a five-star hotel in Bangkok. Thought to be a former Russian spy, something he denies, he is said to speak six languages and hold as many passports. He has long been known to global intelligence services for dispatching transport aircraft brimming with weaponry to anyone willing to pay,... ( gunpolicy.org )

Thailand, United States, Russia, World

Russian Arms Dealer's Arrest Reflects Global Web of Gun Runners

Agence France Presse
7 March 2008

MOSCOW -- From factories in a breakaway zone of Moldova to underwater test sites in Kyrgyzstan, the ex-Soviet Union has provided rich pickings for arms dealers like the legendary Viktor Bout. Bout, who was arrested March 6 in a joint U.S.-Thai operation in Bangkok, is alleged to have been at the heart of a new kind of weapons trading that emerged from the ashes of the Cold War in 1991. Various reports have linked Bout to... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Russia, Thailand, Colombia, World

US Charges Notorious Russian Arms Dealer With Gun Running to Colombia

New York Times
7 March 2008

WASHINGTON -- A Russian businessman regarded by the United States as one of the world's most notorious arms dealers was arrested in Thailand on Thursday as part of an American-led sting operation. He was promptly charged in the United States with conspiracy for trying to smuggle missiles and rocket launchers to rebels in Colombia. The businessman, Viktor Bout, 41, is suspected of supplying weapons to the Taliban and Al Qaeda and... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Russia, Thailand, Colombia, World

'Most-wanted' Global Gun Runner Arrested in Thailand: US Wants Viktor Bout

CNN
6 March 2008

NEW YORK -- For years, Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout made millions of dollars delivering weapons and ammunition to warlords and militants, officials say. On Thursday, Bout and his associate, Andrew Smulian, were arrested in Thailand after a series of events that officials said could have come straight out of a spy novel. The men's capture involved law enforcement agencies from at least five countries, including two undercover... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Russia, Thailand, Colombia, World

Russian Gun Runner Dubbed 'Merchant of Death' Arrested in Bangkok Sting

Associated Press
6 March 2008

BANGKOK, Thailand -- A suspected Russian arms dealer dubbed the "Merchant of Death" was arrested Thursday in Bangkok on allegations that he conspired to supply Colombian rebels with arms and explosives, Thai police said. Police Lt. Gen. Pongpat Chayapan said Viktor Bout was arrested in a hotel on a warrant from a Thai court following a monthlong manhunt. The warrant came out of an earlier one issued by the U.S. Drug Enforcement... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Russia, Thailand, Colombia, World

Thais Arrest 'Merchant of Death' Russian Gun Runner, US Feds Lay Charges

Reuters
6 March 2008

BANGKOK/NEW YORK -- Viktor Bout, an international arms dealer dubbed the "Merchant of Death," was arrested in Thailand and charged in New York on Thursday with trying to sell weapons to Colombian rebels, officials said. Bout, the target of U.S. sanctions, was charged with conspiring to sell millions of dollars worth of weapons to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia said in New York.... ( gunpolicy.org )

India, Russia

Kalashnikov Faces Tough Fight Rebuilding Gun Sales in India, World

Telegraph (Calcutta)
22 February 2008

NEW DELHI -- Mikhail Timofeyevich's terrible legacy spawned a culture that changed the face of war forever. But now the Avtomat Kalashnikov assault rifle that bears his surname is struggling to recreate a culture in which everything Russian was the preferred choice for the Indian armed forces. The makers of the Kalash, arguably the best-known name in small arms, were tucked away in a five-foot-by-five-foot prefab stall... ( gunpolicy.org )

India, Russia

India to Manufacture Kalashnikov Assault Rifles Under Licence to Russia

Times of India / TNN
19 February 2008

NEW DELHI -- With the 61st anniversary of the famed Kalashnikov AK-47 series around the corner, the Russian manufacturer of the world's best-known assault rifle announced that the latest AK-100 series will be manufactured in India. The Russian arms company, Izhmash, will shortly issue a licence to an Indian private arms manufacturer with whom negotiations are at an advanced stage. Company spokesperson Alexander Xavarzin said assembling... ( gunpolicy.org )

India, Russia

Kalashnikov Assault Rifles May Be Made in India, Under Licence to Russia

Daily News & Analysis (Mumbai)
19 February 2008

NEW DELHI -- The legendary Assault rifle Kalashnikov (AK) is set to make a 'legal' entry into India. The Russian firm making the AK rifles, Izhmash, is in advanced talks with a reputed Indian industry group to start manufacture in India of the latest AK-100 series. This is the lighter, though deadlier version of the assault rifle born a few months after World War II ended. "We are carrying on negotiations with one major... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, India

Russia to Showcase New Assault Weapons, Handguns at Indian Arms Fair

RIA Novosti (Russia)
11 February 2008

MOSCOW -- Russia plans to showcase its range of new small arms and light weapons (SALW) at an International arms exhibition in India, defense industry officials said on Monday. The Defexpo India-2008 exhibition and conference is due to take place at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi February 16 through 19. State-run arms exporter Rosoboronexport said it would showcase advanced Kalashnikov AK-101, AK-102 (5.56 mm), AK-103 and AK-104... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Gun Laws, Firearm Ownership, Licensing and Armed Self Defence in Russia

Moscow News Weekly
31 January 2008

Life in Moscow can be as dangerous as in any large city -- and while street crime may be not as rife as in Rio, Moscow remains far from Oslo in terms of security. Russian law allows citizens and residents to defend themselves from aggressors, while shops in the capital offer a wide range of means of self-defense. For those interested in defending themselves, the legal limits and guidelines on purchasing weapons may look daunting. While other... ( gunpolicy.org )

United Kingdom, Lithuania, Russia

Russian Baikal Starter Pistols Converted in Lithuania, Sold to UK Criminals

Independent (UK)
21 October 2007

The name Andrius Rauba means nothing to the urban drug gangs whose turf wars have left 53 children and teenagers dead in the UK this year, at least 10 of whom have been shot. And yet, from thousands of miles away, he was a vital link in the chain that very probably led to those tragedies. Ballistics experts working to establish which guns took the lives of two more teenagers on Britain's streets this week will be not be surprised... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Russia, World

Kremlin, Pentagon, Others Turn Blind Eye to Notorious Global Gun Runners

Washington Post
23 September 2007

Immediately after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, President Bush declared that the rest of the world had to decide whether it was with us or against us. But it turns out that in the new world order, you can be both -- and make a boatload of money in the process. Take Viktor Bout, a Russian air-transport magnate and the world's premier gray-market arms provider. Every year, warlords, gangsters, militiamen and terrorists... ( gunpolicy.org )

Africa, Russia, World

Viktor Bout, 'Merchant of Death' and Global Gun Runner, Still Making Deals

BBC News, Book review
17 September 2007

The name Victor Bout first came on my radar in the late 1990s when, in my job as a BBC reporter in Africa, I found myself spending an inordinate amount of time with soldiers. The region had more than its share of wars and armed men. I spent time with scruffy rebels in the Guinean bush and smart Indian UN peacekeepers; I sought out a United Nations commander at a golf club in Liberia one Sunday morning and met a Nigerian... ( gunpolicy.org )

World, United States, Russia

Russia, US Protect Global Gun Runner Viktor Bout, Real-Life 'Lord Of War'

Mother Jones (USA)
13 September 2007

Journalist Douglas Farah, co-author of a new book on Viktor Bout, tells how the Tajik-born arms dealer forged a lucrative career skirting U.N. embargoes to sell weapons and air transport services to warlords and despots -- not to mention the U.S. military and its contractors in Iraq. Former Soviet military officer Viktor Bout, the inspiration for Nicholas Cage's character in the Lord of War, remade himself as an international arms... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Russia, World

Merchant of Death: Global Gun Runner Viktor Bout Makes War Possible

News Tribune (Washington), Book review
26 August 2007

Merchant of Death: Money, Guns, Planes and the Man Who Makes War Possible By Douglas Farah and Stephen Braun Wiley, 308 pages, $25.95 Viktor Bout was a wanted man. An international arrest warrant had been issued. Western intelligence agencies investigated him. The U.S. Treasury Department seized his fleet of cargo jets and froze other assets. An executive order banned business dealings with him. And while worldwide... ( gunpolicy.org )

Venezuela, Russia

Venezuela to Purchase Thousands of Russian Dragunov Sniper Rifles

New York Times
16 August 2007

MOSCOW -- A proposed contract between Russia and Venezuela that could transfer thousands of sniper rifles to Venezuela has raised concerns in the United States about the potential use or regional distribution of the weapons by the socialist-inspired government of President Hugo Chavez. The rifle in question is the latest variant of the Dragunov, a long-barreled, semi-automatic design with a telescopic sight. It is derived in part... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, Venezuela

Russia to Build 2 Kalashnikov Assault Rifle, Ammo Factories in Venezuela

RIA Novosti (Russia)
6 August 2007

IZHEVSK, Urals -- Russia will build two factories for production of the famous Kalashnikov assault rifle and ammunition in Venezuela by 2010, a Russian arms manufacturer said Monday. The Urals-based Izhevsk Mechanical Plant (IMP) earlier fulfilled a contract to supply 100,000 AK-103 assault rifles to Venezuela, and signed a new contract licensing production of Kalashnikov rifles in the Latin American country. "We will begin... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, United States, World

Russia Celebrates AK47's 60th, But Others Profit from 'Illegal' US Gun Trade

New York Times
15 July 2007

MOSCOW -- The automatic Kalashnikov, the world's most abundant firearm and a martial symbol with a multiplicity of meanings, turns 60 this year. In some places this is cause to shudder. In Russia it is treated as a milestone to celebrate, and a chance to cry foul. Once strictly Communist products, the AK-47 and its offspring are killing tools so durable and easy to use that they were heralded as achievements of state socialism and... ( gunpolicy.org )

Moldova, Iraq, Russia, Middle East

Former KGB Smuggles Russian Guns from Transnistria, Moldova to Iraq

CBN News, Transcript
22 March 2007

It's an all-too-familiar scene -- Islamic insurgents attacking U.S. troops near Baghdad. But where are these radicals getting their support to take on the American military machine? While much of the world blames Iran and Syria, evidence points to help coming from thousands of miles away. Ariel Cohen of the Heritage Foundation said, "Of course, we see a large number of small weapons turning up in Iraq in the hands of Hezbollah,... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russia Slams Former Allies as 'Weapon Pirates' for Illegally Copying Guns

Nezavisimaya Gazeta / RIA Novosti (Russia)
19 March 2007

The intellectual piracy of Russian military technologies in some eastern European countries is damaging the Russian economy, Sergei Ivanov, the first deputy prime minister and former defense minister, said at a recent meeting of the export-control commission. It was the first time a high-ranking Russian official has made such an accusation, although the fact itself is nothing new, Alexander Sharavin, director of the Institute for... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Illegal Gun Manufacturers, Suppliers Arrested in Southern Russia

Interfax (Moscow) / BBC Monitoring
5 March 2007

MOSCOW -- The operation of a criminal group in North Ossetia involved in the production and supply of weapons for militants in the North Caucasus has been curtailed, and six people have been arrested. "On 26 February in the territory of the Republic of North Ossetia (Alania) the operations of a clandestine criminal group involved in organizing a channel for the production and sale of illegal firearms, ammunitions and explosives... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russia's Izhevsk AK-47 Museum: Homage to the Gun That Won the East

New York Times
18 February 2007

Valentin Yakovlev stood quietly, almost solemnly, before the assault rifles, all of them tidily arranged behind glass. It was a cold morning in Izhevsk, a city in the Ural Mountains, and Mr. Yakovlev, who as a small child survived the siege of Leningrad and is now a pensioner from a former Soviet arms plant, had beaten the crowds to pay homage to an almost ubiquitous accompaniment to modern war. He made the rounds alone, gun by... ( gunpolicy.org )

Malta, Iraq, Italy, Libya, China, Russia

Maltese Company, Libya, China Accused of Gun Running to Iraqi Insurgents

Independent (Malta)
15 February 2007

Italian authorities yesterday announced they had interrupted an international arms trafficking deal that was to have operated between China, Malta, Italy and Libya, and which planned to supply hundreds of thousands of weapons to Iraqi insurgents, international media reported yesterday. The operation was to have seen an unnamed Maltese company acting as a middleman between Chinese weapons producers and Libyan buyers, who would, in... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

3 Killed as Russian Policeman Battles Own Family With Gun, Grenades

MosNews (Moscow)
23 January 2007

A Russian policeman used a gun and grenades against own family killing his wife and daughter before being shot dead by his son-in-law, the Interfax news agency reported on Monday. The incident took place in a private house in the city of Makhachkala, in the South Russian internal republic of Dagestan. After a row with his wife, a local policemen threw two hand grenades in the room where his family members were and then opened fire... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, United States, United Kingdom, World

Viktor Bout, Russian Agents and the London Gun Trafficking Connection

Evening Standard (London)
6 December 2006

Two London companies are being investigated over an international arms-smuggling racket linked to the Russian intelligence agency at the centre of the radiation assassination mystery. US investigators have accused the firms of helping Russian arms dealers obtain equipment that paramilitaries could use around the globe. According to US court documents obtained by the Evening Standard, the firms -- one with an address in... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, World

Russia Urges Crackdown on Unlicensed Gun Producers Pirating AK-47s

RIA Novosti (Russia)
5 December 2006

MOSCOW -- Russia intends to step up its efforts to prevent illegal production and sales of Russian arms abroad, a senior Foreign Ministry official said Tuesday. Russia says it suffers major losses from the counterfeit manufacture of Kalashnikov assault rifles in Bulgaria. The armies of 47 countries use the AK-47 assault rifle, known as the Kalashnikov after its designer, Mikhail Kalashnikov. About 100 million AK-47s and... ( gunpolicy.org )

Venezuela, Russia

US/NATO Ban Forced Venezuela to Buy Russian Guns, Says Chavez

Itar-Tass (Moscow)
1 December 2006

CARACAS -- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Thursday denied accusations that purchases of Russian weapons fan up arms race in the region and said they are intended exclusively for defense. He also recalled that Venezuela began to buy Russian armaments after the United States imposed an arms embargo on Caracas in May under the pretext of insufficient cooperation in the fight against terrorism. "The purchases are intended exclusively... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russian Police Seized 400,000 Units of Guns, Ammunition in 10 Months

RIA Novosti (Russia)
28 November 2006

MOSCOW -- Police seized more than 400,000 units of weaponry and ammunition in Russia during the first ten months of 2006, a senior police official said Tuesday. The bulk of illegal arms and ammunition comes from military conflict zones, especially in the North Caucasus, and as a result of theft at various weapon manufacturing facilities throughout Russia. "According to some estimates, [Russian] citizens illegally possess... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, World

Kalashnikov AK-47: The Weapon That Changed the Face of War

Washington Post
26 November 2006

In the grand narrative of World War II, the Battle of Bryansk is a minor conflict, barely deserving of a footnote. But Bryansk has another place in history. It was there that a then-unknown tank commander named Mikhail Kalashnikov decided that his Russian comrades would never again be defeated. In the years following the Great Patriotic War, as Soviet propagandists dubbed it, he was to conceive and fabricate a weapon so simple, and yet so... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Russia, World

Pennsylvania Gun Store Raid Probes Illegal Sales to Viktor Bout in Moscow

Los Angeles Times
24 November 2006

WASHINGTON -- A sporting goods store in a small northern Pennsylvania town is the unlikely focus of a federal investigation into the suspected reemergence of the global arms transport network controlled by Russian businessman Victor Bout. Federal officials said this week that a recent search of the store near Wilkes-Barre, Pa., sought to learn whether a Bulgarian firm in Bout's business empire was being used to purchase restricted... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

AK-47 in the Classroom: Russian High School Students Learn ABCs of War

Moscow Times
15 November 2006

Clack clack clack. Polished nails run over tiny pins and latches. Suddenly, the deadly Kalashnikov rifle is deadly no more, its stock and barrel and sundry springs strewn across a spotless tablecloth. "Good, take your seat," the instructor said, and the 15-year-old female student sporting a simple dark uniform sat down, surrounded by her peers. Training for underage guerrillas? No. Just a recent lesson from the Basics of... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, United States, China, World

Russia Tops US, Europe, China in Gun Trade to Developing World

National Post (Toronto) / CanWest
6 November 2006

UNITED NATIONS -- Ask anyone to guess who's the biggest arms supplier to developing countries and chances are the answer will be the United States -- the world's biggest arms trader. But the latest figures on new arms deals show Russia is now the biggest peddler of weapons to what used to be called the Third World, and the United States comes in third behind France. In fact, when it comes to sub-Saharan Africa, host to... ( gunpolicy.org )

Congo (DRC), Russia

Russian Gun Runner Viktor Bout Denies Trafficking Arms to Congo

Moscow News
4 November 2006

Russian businessman Viktor Bout denied Wednesday a U.S. accusation that he was involved in weapons deliveries to the Democratic Republic of Congo, RIA Novosti reported. On Tuesday, U.S President George Bush issued an executive order blocking the assets of seven individuals, including general Laurent Nkunda and Russian businessman Viktor Bout, Reuters reported. The said individuals are being accused of impeding disarmament activities,... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Russia, World

Bout, Merchant of Death: Global Gun Runner Exploits Cracks in Globalization

Foreign Policy (US) November/December
1 November 2006

In many ways, Viktor Bout is a prototypical, modern-day, multinational entrepreneur. He is smart, savvy, and ambitious. He's good with numbers, speaks several languages, and knows how to seize opportunities when they arise. According to those who've met him, he's polite, professional, and unassuming. Bout has no known history of violence, and no political agenda. He loves his family. He's fed the poor. And through his hard work,... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russia Plans to Tighten Gun Trade Export Controls

Gazeta (Russia) / Ria Novosti
12 October 2006

The Russian government is toughening its controls over the export of light weapons and small firearms. Russian officials, who may require customers to report on the status of the weapons, will also have the right to conduct on-site inspections. Experts said the decision was motivated by Israel's complaints about the sale of Russian anti-tank guided missiles by Syria to the radical Hizbollah movement in Lebanon. New export-control... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, Bulgaria

Russia Accuses Bulgaria Over Illegal Kalashnikov Assault Rifle Sales

RIA Novosti (Russia)
26 September 2006

ZELENOGRAD -- Russia suffers major losses from the counterfeit manufacture of Kalashnikov assault rifles in Bulgaria, the defense minister said Tuesday. The armies of 47 countries use the AK-47 assault rifle, known as the Kalashnikov after designer Mikhail Kalashnikov. About 100 million AK-47s and modifications are believed to circulate around the world, but many of them are produced illegally. "Russia loses billions of... ( gunpolicy.org )

Moldova, Russia

Moldova's Ex-defence Minister Charged With Gun Smuggling

RIA Novosti (Russia)
15 September 2006

CHISINAU -- Valery Pasat, Moldova's former defense minister and head of the country's information and security service, has been accused again of weapons smuggling, the Prosecutor General's Office said Friday. The new charges were brought against Pasat after 14 bullets, a pistol and a revolver were found in his apartment. The Prosecutor General's Office said the investigation shows the pistol was presented to Pasat by a... ( gunpolicy.org )

Cyprus, Russia

Cyprus the World's 3rd Largest Trader in Guns, Says Small Arms Survey

Cyprus Mail (Nicosia)
29 August 2006

It's 5PM: I'm in a pub on "the strip" in Limassol. It's a jolly place, Arsenal memorabilia adorns the walls, pound a pint lager is being readily consumed, pretty Ukranian waitresses are serving roast beef and carrots to holiday makers and residents alike. Utd are taking on Watford: there's support for both sides and a pleasant hubbub of noise provides background cover for the usual football banter. Behind me, a 35-year-old English... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Foreign Handgun Imports to Russia Push Out Veteran Makarov Pistol

RIA Novosti (Russia), Opinion
16 August 2006

MOSCOW -- News that Russia's Interior Ministry has decided to use some foreign small arms, including Glock, Walther, and Heckler & Koch pistols, has been unpleasant for Russian designers. "Why?" they say, "Our police generals are acting like boys. They have seen too many Hollywood thrillers and spend public money on foreign toys. Our pistols are in no way worse. Some of the foreign makes don't hold a candle to them." That... ( gunpolicy.org )

Venezuela, Russia

Venezuelan President Admires AK-47 Plant in Russia, Tips New Arms Deal

Kommersant (Russia)
27 July 2006

During his three-day tour to Russia, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez went to the country's world-known armory center, Izhevsk (Udmurtia). In Izhevsk, Chavez announced the intention to rearm Venezuelan army with the help of Moscow and lashed out at the United States, contrasting it with Russia. The Bush administration that is attentively eyeing the visit called on Moscow not to sell the innovative weapons to Caracas, including Su-30... ( gunpolicy.org )

Venezuela, Russia

Venezuelan President Tours Russian AK-47 Factory, Plans to Build One

RIA Novosti (Russia)
26 July 2006

MOSCOW -- Venezuela's president arrived in one of Russia's leading defense-industry cities Wednesday morning to tour the home plant of the Kalashnikov assault rifle and meet the regional leadership, a spokesman for the local authorities said. Hugo Chavez touched down in Izhevsk, the capital of the Republic of Udmurtia about 700 miles east of Moscow, and will meet with regional leader Alexander Volkov and gun-maker Mikhail Kalashnikov... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russian Gun Designer Kalashnikov Urges Tough Control Over Gun Trade

Mos News (Moscow)
29 June 2006

The famous Russian gun designer Mikhail Kalashnikov has called for tougher control over the small arms turnover to rule out uncontrolled weapons sales, Interfax news agency reports. "Tough procedure for registering and marking each weapon, and mutual recognition of such markings and information exchanges will help to rein counterfeit products sales. I believe that it is a realistic, efficient, and inexpensive approach to solving... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, World

Kalashnikov Supports Curbs on Gun Trade, But Not on AK-47 Production

Deutsche Welle
28 June 2006

According to arms control campaigners, the Kalashnikov AK-47 assault rifle is the world's favorite killing machine, and it will remain so for at least 20 years. DW-WORLD.DE spoke to its inventor. Up to 100 million AK-47s and variations of its design are in circulation around the world, including in the state arsenal of at least 82 countries, according to a report published by the Control Arms Campaign on Monday. AK-47s... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, United Nations

Keep My Guns Under Lock and Key: AK-47 Inventor Promotes UN Treaty

Reuters
23 June 2006

Izhevsk, Russia -- Mikhail Kalashnikov, the man who gave his name to the world's most widely used assault rifle, wants action to stop fake versions of his weapon landing in the hands of child soldiers and militants. "There should be civilised laws preventing weapons from circulating freely around the world," Kalashnikov said on Friday. "Weapons should only be in the hands of those who are defending their state -- who defend... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, World

Mikhail Kalashnikov Backs UN Small Arms Conference Gun Trade Treaty

Times (UK)
20 June 2006

MOSCOW -- Hardly a day goes by without Mikhail Kalashnikov turning on his television set and seeing his lethal invention being brandished somewhere. It still makes him proud to see the Kalashnikov assault rifle, better known as the AK-47, in the hands of professional soldiers and national liberation movements. But now, aged 86, he laments that it has become the weapon of choice for terrorists, criminals and child soldiers -- and,... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russia Pragmatic on Arms, But is Trade Healthy? - Features [Part 3 of 3]

Reuters, Series
19 June 2006

MOSCOW -- Missiles to Syria and Iran, warplanes to Venezuela and Myanmar, helicopters to Sudan -- Russia goes its own way when it comes to selling arms, seemingly immune to ethical debates that affect the industry elsewhere. While European Union members argue over whether to lift a weapons ban against China, almost half of Russia's $6 billion arms sales last year went to Beijing. As the White House struggles to persuade... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

At Least 194,000 Military Firearms Are Missing from Russian Armouries

Nezavisimaya Gazeta (Moscow)
14 June 2006

Criminal groups prefer Army weapons, Sergey Manakhov, deputy chief of the Russian MVD (Internal Affairs Ministry) Directorate for Control Over Investigation of Particularly Dangerous Crimes, declared to journalists. Information on those weapons is not listed in police files, they were not "spotted" in turf wars, and criminals can throw them out without fearing that the barrel will trace investigators back to their owner, Manakhov said. ... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Gun Maker Mikhail Kalashnikov Regrets His AK-47 Design

Associated Press
10 June 2006

Mikhail Kalashnikov says he designed the assault rifle that bears his name to fend off the German invasion of the Soviet Union. Six decades later, he laments its transformation into the worldwide weapon of choice for many terrorists and gangsters. "Whenever I look at TV and I see the weapon I invented to defend my motherland in the hands of these bin Ladens I ask myself the same question: How did it get into their hands'?"... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russia Pushing Ban on Illegal Production of Kalashnikov Rifles

RIA Novosti (Russia)
28 April 2006

MOSCOW -- Russia's state-controlled arms exporter will push to stop the illegal production and supplies of Kalashnikov assault rifles, a company spokesman said Friday. "Rosoboronexport is resolved to use all available legal means to press for an end to the illegal production and supplies of Kalashnikov automatic rifles," Valery Kartavtsev said, adding that Russian enterprises intended to file lawsuits against illegal producers.... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, Iraq, World

Kalashnikov, Izhmash Claim a Billion AK-47s, Variants Worldwide

Reuters
17 April 2006

MOSCOW -- Mikhail Kalashnikov, designer of the world's most popular assault rifle, says that U.S. soldiers in Iraq are using his invention in preference to their own weapons, proving that his gun is still the best. "Even after lying in a swamp you can pick up this rifle, aim it and shoot. That's the best job description there is for a gun. Real soldiers know that and understand it," the 86-year-old gunmaker told a weekend news conference... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, World

90% of Kalashnikov Rifles on World Market Are Knock-offs, Says Izhmash

RIA Novosti (Russia)
16 April 2006

MOSCOW -- Russia accounts for only 10-12% of about 1 million Kalashnikov assault rifles that are sold on the world market every year, the CEO of the Izhmash concern (state-owned military production company) said Saturday. "The rest are unlicensed copies," Vladimir Grodetsky said, adding that there was not a single license agreement conforming to the norms of international law, specifically on the protection of Russia's intellectual... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Over 400,000 Small Arms Seized at Russian Airports Over Past 15 Years

Interfax-AVN (Agentstvo Voyennykh Novostey)
7 February 2006

MOSCOW -- The total of over 430,000 pieces of small arms and about two million rounds of ammunition were confiscated in airports of Russia since 1991 during passenger search, Vladimir Chertok, head of the federal transport security agency, said during the scientific conference organized within the framework of the Security Technologies international forum opened in Moscow Tuesday. "For 15 years over 1 million attempts were prevented... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russia to Display Special Small Arms at Paris Security Exhibit

RIA Novosti
21 November 2005

Russia will display state-of-the-art small arms designed for anti-terrorism police units at the 14th international security exhibition MILIPOL PARIS 2005 that opens in the French capital Tuesday, Russia's arms exporter Rosoboronexport said Monday. "Russian enterprises will demonstrate more than a hundred models of special equipment, many of which have no counterparts in the world and will be displayed for the first time," the company's... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Massive Upsurge of Criminality Tipped as Guns Legalised

Pravda
31 October 2005

The question of making the market of fire arms accessible for Russian citizens has been a topic of numerous discussions in the government and media outlets of the country for years already. The State Duma, the Russian parliament, has returned to amendments to the federal law about weapons, which stipulate a certain extension of the list of civil defense weapons. According to the current version of the Russian law on weapons, citizens... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Five Million Russians Now Own Guns for Self Defence

RIA Novosti (Russia), Opinion
11 August 2005

MOSCOW -- When burglars killed a guard at my neighbor's summer-house, I started thinking about self-defense. The Federal Law On Weapons adopted under Boris Yeltsin in 1996 has enabled five million Russians to buy guns for this purpose. In Moscow alone, some 400,000 people legally keep 470,000 weapons to protect themselves, their families, and property against potential assault in these troubled times. The law in Russia... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Investigation: North Ossetia's Arms Bazaar

Institute for War & Peace Reporting
11 August 2005

VLADIKAVKAZ -- In the North Caucasus, illegal weapons are cheap and readily available. Sergei, a former soldier now resident in North Ossetia, gave IWPR a price list. He said that in Chechnya one can buy an automatic weapon, often captured from rebel fighters, for 200 US dollars. Outside Chechnya, Kalashnikov rifles cost 500 dollars. A grenade launcher can be found inside Chechnya for as little as 100 dollars, while outside the... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, China

Russian Customs Thwarts Ammunition Smuggling Into China

RIA Novosti
10 August 2005

NOVOSIBIRSK -- The Trans-Baikal customs office in Siberia has foiled an attempt to smuggle small arms ammunition into China, its press office said Wednesday. The customs officers at the Zabaikalsk international automobile checkpoint found a cache of ammunition in a KAMAZ truck, loaded with metal scrap, heading for China. The stash included a 1943 machinegun belt with 79 armor-piercing 7.62 mm cartridges and almost 50 tracing... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russia Seeks UN Support to Regain Leadership in Gun Making

Moscow Times
4 August 2005

Russia plans to call in the support of the United Nations in its battle to regain leadership of the small arms market, a Foreign Ministry official said Wednesday. In a move to tackle unlicensed manufacturing of arms including its best selling Kalashnikov assault rifle, Russia wants to have its intellectual property rights on small arms recognized under a UN initiative against illicit trade in small weapons. "We are against... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, World

Ill-Secured Soviet Arms Depots Tempting Rebels and Terrorists

New York Times
16 July 2005

ICHNYA, Ukraine -- The ammunition is stacked in mounds in a clearing, exposed to rain and sun. The crates that hold it are rotting. After more than a decade in the elements, many have ruptured, exposing high-explosive rockets and mortar fins. This is the overstuffed ammunition depot behind the security fences at Military Unit A1479, a small base in the Ukrainian forest under military guard. At least 5,700 tons of ammunition, grenades... ( gunpolicy.org )

United Kingdom, Europe, Japan, Russia, Canada, World, Australia

Feature: G8 Nations and Australia's Global Gun Sales Detailed

Age (Melbourne)
7 July 2005

As George Bush, Tony Blair, Vladimir Putin and the other G8 leaders discuss the world's problems at their luxurious Gleneagles hotel, Africa's death dealers are hawking their wares in open-air markets. In the Somali capital, Mogadishu, at least four gun markets operate where Russian made AK-47 assault rifles, American M-16s and German semi-automatics are sold for less than $250. Not far from the markets, mortars, missiles and anti-aircraft... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Europe, Japan, Canada, Russia, World

Arms for the Poor: G8 Gun Sales to Impoverished Countries

Age (Melbourne)
6 July 2005

UNITED STATES -- The dominant player in the international arms trade, delivering $205 billion of conventional weapons between 1996 and 2003. Though US law prevents exports to countries with human rights violations, America has recently equipped forces in Colombia, Israel, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, the Philippines, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. The development agencies' report (see main story) said big and persistent concerns remained over the human... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, Venezuela

Russia Signs 100,000-Kalashnikov Sale to Venezuela

RIA Novosti (Russia)
19 May 2005

RIO DE JANEIRO -- On Tuesday Venezuela and Russia signed an agreement on supplies of 100,000 Kalashnikov submachine-guns to that South-American country. The sum total of the transaction is $54 million. Russia undertook to supply to Venezuela, alongside weapons, also 2,000 handbooks, as well as spare parts and accessories for the AK submachine-guns. This transaction also provides for transferring technology of assembly of the submachine-guns... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, Venezuela

Report: Russia, Venezuela Sign Gun Deal

Associated Press
18 May 2005

Russia and Venezuela signed a contract for 100,000 Russian assault rifles to be provided to the Latin American nation, the ITAR-Tass news agency reported. The contract, signed on Tuesday by Venezuelan Defense Minister Jorge Garcia and Sergei Ladygin, the regional chief of Russia's state arms agency Rosoboronexport, provides for the AK-103 guns to be delivered between October and March, ITAR-Tass said. President Hugo Chavez's... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Mikhail Kalashnikov to Unveil Advanced Weapons in Minsk

RIA Novosti (Russia)
11 May 2005

Mikhail Kalashnikov, 85, the patriarch of Russian gun makers and designer of the most popular gun in the world -- the Kalashnikov assault rifle, is as active as usual. He is to personally unveil his latest design at the MILEX 2005 international arms show in Minsk from May 17 to 20. According to Rosoboronexport -- the only Russian state arms export intermediary, the legendary arms designer will also participate in the 2nd international... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Armed Police to Protect Flights

RIA Novosti (Russia)
5 April 2005

MOSCOW -- A new federal law under which plain clothes police will fly on domestic and international flights came into force yesterday. Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev said these policemen "will be armed," Izvestia reports. All the changes provided for in the law are designed to transfer part of aviation security functions from airport services and airlines to the Interior Ministry. The law says that the latter's agencies have... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, United Kingdom, World

Russia Expects Explanations from Britain on Arms Initiative

RIA Novosti (Russia)
17 March 2005

MOSCOW -- Russia hopes to get explanations from Great Britain on its initiative concerning the conclusion of an international arms trade treaty within the framework of the United Nations, the Russian Foreign Ministry said. "We hope to receive from our British colleagues during the on-coming meetings, including as proposed by Jack Straw, within the G8 framework, additional explanations on the gist of their initiative," the ministry... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Romania, Russia, Ukraine

Supremacist Suspect Named as Europe/US Gunrunner

Seattle Times (Washington)
25 February 2005

A former Aryan Nations member charged last week with selling machine guns to an undercover informant was part of a gun-smuggling ring that shipped weapons into Seattle from Eastern Europe, according to a federal affidavit unsealed yesterday in U.S. District Court. Keith D. Gilbert, who once spent time in prison for possessing 1,400 pounds of explosives he later claimed were intended to blow up the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, Venezuela, United States

US Protests, Russia Defends Planned Arms Sales to Venezuela

Voice of America
11 February 2005

Russia is defending its plans to sell Venezuela assault rifles and helicopters. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov dismissed concerns expressed by the United States that the guns and aircraft could fall into the hands of leftist rebels in Colombia. Mr. Lavrov said the arms deal is a bilateral issue in line with international law. U.S. officials fear Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who has strained relations with Washington,... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, Venezuela, United States

Planned Russian Arms Sale to Venezuela Troubles U.S.

ABC News (USA) / Reuters
10 February 2005

The United States said on Thursday it was troubled by Russian plans to sell Venezuela arms that U.S. officials suggest could be used to aid leftist guerrillas in Latin America. The arms pact announced last year by Venezuela's firebrand President Hugo Chavez would give the South American OPEC member 100,000 automatic rifles and a number of helicopters. Venezuela is also evaluating Russian MiG-29 fighters as possible replacements... ( gunpolicy.org )

United States, Russia

Russian Shotgun Imports 'Beginning of the End' for Remington?

Observer-Dispatch (New York)
9 February 2005

ILION -- Company officials may say otherwise, but employees at the local Remington Arms factory are fearful the production of a new line of shotguns in Russia could be the beginning of the end for a relationship that dates back nearly two centuries. At the beginning of the year, Remington, one of the oldest and largest domestic firearm producers, announced the formation of a new division, Spartan Gunworks by Remington, an imported... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russian Postal 'Babushkas' to Carry Pistols

Telegraph (UK)
1 February 2005

Postal workers in Russia are to be issued with guns to deter thugs from stealing cash welfare payments. Most Russians receive their post from puffing grannies of uncertain age and the prospect of such "babushkas" being forced to carry pistols has shocked a country used to violent crime. "With their weapons and bullet-proof vests, workers who deliver pensions and benefits will soon resemble special forces rather than postmen,"... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

100,000 Russian Postal Workers to Carry Pistols

RIA Novosti
31 January 2005

MOSCOW -- Under a government directive signed recently by Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov, the country's postal workers will be given the right to carry and use firearms. The government believes that this will ensure security for money that is to be delivered to people entitled to cash payments under the recent welfare overhaul, writes Novye Izvestia. According to official data, Russia has over 40,000 post offices, which... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Half of All Stolen Rifles Originated at Defence Ministry, Says Official

Agentstvo Voyennykh Novostey WWW-Text (Interfax-AVN)
28 January 2005

MOSCOW -- About 47 percent of rifled weapons, in search by law enforcement, are stolen from the Defense Ministry, Colonel Sergei Fedkin, deputy head of the criminal department of the Russian Interior Ministry, said in an interview with the Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozrenie newspaper, published Friday. "Almost every third weapon seized by law enforcement is stolen from military organizations, and first of all from the Defense Ministry.... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Russia's Mailmen to Carry Guns

Agence France Presse
28 January 2005

MOSCOW -- The Russian government decided to equip its mail carriers and their bosses with guns, the Interfax news agency reported. The guns, preferably revolvers, will be given to those who have to transport cash, the report said, without specifying how many weapons would be issued in all or when the program would begin. The decision must still be approved by the justice ministry, the report said. Without a viable... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Police Say Army Loses Many Guns

Moscow Times
22 December 2004

Nearly half of the thousands of guns that have been reported as lost or stolen were issued to the military, a senior police official said Tuesday, calling for tougher gun penalties. As of Dec. 1, a total of 178,000 weapons had been reported as missing. The figure includes 66,600 guns and pistols, 2,000 automatic rifles and 71 rocket launchers, said Alexander Trudov, head of the Interior Ministry's criminal investigations department.... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Courts Try 30,000 Arms Smuggling Cases a Year

RIA Novosti
21 December 2004

MOSCOW -- Every year Russian courts try about 30,000 arms smuggling cases, Colonel (police) Alexander Trudov, the head of the sixth division of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Interior Ministry, said Tuesday. "A review of the court cases has shown," he said, "only every fifth defendant is sentenced to a prison time and in more than 70% of the cases probation is used. "Today, at a time of a constant threat of... ( gunpolicy.org )

World, Russia

Gun Makers' Decline: Swords into Vodka, Kalashnikov

Newsweek (22 Nov International edition)
14 November 2004

If he had designed an athletic shoe, Lt. Gen. Mikhail Kalashnikov wouldn't have to be hustling so hard at his age. Kalashnikov's gift for guns made him a hero of the Soviet Union many times over, and his 85th birthday was feted by nostalgic Russians last week. But his legendary AK-47 is so sturdy that old models have created a permanent glut, contributing to a worldwide decline in the sale of new small arms. That, in turn, is forcing gun... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Nostalgia, Honour Surround Father of AK-47

International Herald Tribune / New York Times
12 November 2004

IZHEVSK -- Russia's most famous general arrived promptly at 10 a.m. The doors to the ceremonial chamber of a presidential palace swung open, and there he stood. He wore a green dress uniform with gold epaulets. Medals lined his chest. Everyone in the chamber stood. The general, Mikhail Kalashnikov, creator of the world's most widely distributed firearm, turned 85 on Wednesday, and here, in the once secretive Soviet city in the western... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

With Seven Million Guns, Some Politicians Want Reform of Gun Laws

RIA Novosti
22 September 2004

MOSCOW -- People's Party leader Gennady Gudkov, who is also a member of the State Duma's security committee, consistently opposes the sale of firearms to the population. Talking to Novye Izvestia, Gudkov tried to substantiate his position. In his words, those seemingly attractive possible legislative amendments allowing ordinary citizens to tote firearms, are a dead-end option because even Switzerland and the United States don't grant such... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Gun Fever

Pravda (Russia)
16 September 2004

After the recent terrorist act in Beslan, Russians have begun purchasing legal means of self-defense. Some even address direct letters to different law-enforcement agencies across the country with a plea to authorize sales of hunting rifles and self-defense firearms. The State Duma plans to adopt certain amendments by the end of this month, aimed at restricting the overall turnover of firearms and explosives in the country.... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, United States

School Attack Could Easily Happen Here

Collegiate Times (USA), Editorial
7 September 2004

There is no such pain experienced by the grown heart as that caused by the death of a child. It is such an affront to the joy of life that even the most detached observer must begin to taste the unspeakable torment that spawns from it. But for those who most directly bear it, a child's death is a pain of a magnitude on can only begin to imagine. In the town of Beslan, Russia there are 156 families suffering this incomprehensible... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, United States

Armed Civilian Militia Made a Bad Situation Worse, Says Russian Siege Soldier

Los Angeles Times
5 September 2004

BESLAN -- Mikhail, a soldier who participated in the terrible battle at Middle School No. 1, is matter-of-fact as he describes how Russian commandos killed a young hostage. "On the second floor, there was one fighter who was covering himself with a child," Mikhail, who gave only his first name, said Saturday. "The child had to be killed first, and then they killed the terrorist. It was the kind of situation where the guys who had... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, Bulgaria

Kalashnikov Mess

Sofia Echo (Bulgaria)
9 August 2004

Kalashnikov automatic rifles are quite popular in Bulgaria due to two facts -- large quantities of them are manufactured in the country, and they are usually involved in spectacular criminal shootings. However, the Kalashnikov is causing Bulgaria further embarrassment damaging its image abroad. Its is reported that Kalashnikovs have been illegally exported to war-torn countries by Bulgarian traders, and as the Associated Press reported on... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Cheap Imports Outgun Kalashnikov Sales

Associated Press
28 July 2004

MOSCOW -- The Kalashnikov, like vodka, seems quintessentially Russian. But, as with vodka, plenty of other countries make versions of the assault rifle, and Russia's arms export agency isn't flattered. It doesn't help that the foreign versions come cheaper. The Kalashnikov isn't the most sophisticated or accurate gun, but its simplicity and reliability have made it the world's most popular automatic weapon: An estimated... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia, United States

My Designs Pirated By US, Says Kalashnikov

New York Times
26 July 2004

ZHEVSK -- The bazaar in this industrial city shows why Western companies regard Russia as a land of piracy. Bootlegged copies of new American movies -- "King Arthur," "Troy" and "Spider-Man 2" -- sell for $3. Photoshop CS, a $600 program in Western stores, fetches $2.75. Markets like this, found throughout Russia, have been a longstanding subject of diplomatic complaint. Washington contends Russian intellectual-property... ( gunpolicy.org )

Georgia, Russia

Sham Disarmament, Say Georgian Officials

Messenger (Georgia)
21 July 2004

Russia is shipping useless ammunition and arms from different military bases to the Tskhinvali region in a ploy to challenge Georgia, officials in Tbilisi claim. Deputy Minister of State Security Gigi Ugulava stated at a briefing on Tuesday that Russia is sending mainly useless firearms and other military equipment. They will be first delivered to the Tskhinvali population and then withdrawn from them by the de facto government.... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

5000 Rubles for a Pistol in Chechen Buyback

Interfax
10 June 2004

MOSCOW/KHANKALA -- Residents of Chechnya will be invited to surrender firearms for cash, an official in the regional headquarters for anti-terrorist operations the North Caucasus told Interfax on Thursday. The goal is to reduce the amount of crimes committed with firearms and explosives, a headquarters press release says. The Chechen government has passed an ordinance under which 5,000 rubles will be paid for every pistol,... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Police May Pay for Arms Surrendered in Chechnya

Interfax
8 June 2004

MOSCOW -- The experience of paying money for arms surrender applied in North Caucasus republics may be applied in Chechnya. "Relying on the experience of neighboring regions, the Chechen government is planning to consider financing the surrender of arms in the framework of the anti-terrorist effort," Gen. Nikolai Pershutkin, deputy chief of the Interior Ministry's public security service, told reporters on Tuesday. "Last... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

New Laws Permit More in Self-Defence, Including Rubber Pellet Guns

Moscow Times
27 May 2004

Vyacheslav Korsakin turned around and saw the man pointing a loaded handgun straight at him. A few minutes later, four men were dead with gunshot wounds in Korsakin's apartment in southwest Moscow. Korsakin was not one of them. Korsakin had invited the four men to his apartment as prospective tenants on Nov. 19, 2002, after making their acquaintance at the Shangri La casino near Pushkin Square. One of the men mentioned... ( gunpolicy.org )

Iraq, Russia, United States, World

Viktor Bout Protected By Coalition

InterPress Service
20 May 2004

PARIS -- Arms dealer Viktor Bout was the merchant of death wanted for feeding conflicts in Africa -- until Iraq happened. Today the United States and Britain are using his extensive mercenary services in Iraq. The condemnation of his role in the diamond wars and other conflicts in sub-Saharan Africa over the past ten years is being silently erased. The Tajikstan-born Bout would be an embarrassing ally to acknowledge publicly.... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Kabardino-Balkarian: Voluntary Arms Surrender Action to Be Held

Itar-Tass
12 April 2004

NALCHIK -- The action for voluntary surrender of arms will be held in Kabardino-Balkaria from May 1 till June 1. The republic's government confirmed compensations to population for voluntarily laid down arms on Monday. Republic's Prime Minister Gennady Gubin signed the resolution to this effect. Voluntary surrender of arms relieves citizens from criminal responsibility for acquisition and storage of arms, and police should provide... ( gunpolicy.org )

Russia

Six Servicemen Questioned in Vladivostok for Firearms Theft

Vladivostok News
10 March 2004

The Far Eastern military prosecutor's office has launched a criminal investigation concerning a theft of 79 firearms from a weapons depot belonging to Special Forces military unit located in the Far Eastern city of Vladivostok. Six servicemen suspected of stealing a sniper rifle, 17 machine-guns and 61 Kalashnikov guns have been detained and are at present being questioned, Primorye Television channel cited a spokesman for Russian... ( gunpolicy.org )

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