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time switch
Russia is currently not going to switch to winter time, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said.
Russia will consider scrapping the last year’s reform that abolished daylight saving, amidst its population complaining of seeing even less sunlight than before.
Switching to summer time is fraught with health problems, including a possible heart attack, according to a survey released by US scientists on Monday. In 2011, Russia stopped switching to seasonal daylight saving times, setting the clock permanently to summer time. The decision was endorsed by President Dmitry Medvedev who mentioned numerous complaints by ordinary people. TASS      
On Sunday, Russia’s airline companies switch to summer flight timetable, which will be valid till October 27, 2012. Russia’s largest aviation company “Aeroflot-Russian airlines” will perform flights to 115 cities of Russia and other countries.
Early Sunday, most of the European countries advanced clocks by one hour to observe the European summertime. The three countries which have not done it are Iceland, Belarus and Russia. Last year Russia abolished switching to wintertime and its clocks stayed on summertime.  Now time difference between Moscow and Paris, for example, is 2 hours.
All clocks in Ukraine were set one hour back on Sunday as the country switched to the winter daylight-saving time. Russia, on the contrary, abandoned the clock change. The time lag between Kiev and Moscow will now be two hours. (TASS)
On Sunday, Russia for the first time in 30 years has not switched to “winter time”.  Previously, Russia switched to wintertime putting its clocks one hour back on last Sunday of October.
The authorities of the Tokelau Islands, in the Pacific, have decided to skip December 30th and move from December 29th right to the 31st. Tokelau officially form part of New Zealand, but are almost 24 hours behind the main part of the country time wise.
The South Pacific island nation of Samoa will jump forward in time by 24 hours from December 29th this year. By doing so, Samoa will switch from the last to one of the planet’s first locations to see the coming of a new date.
Russia put its clocks one hour forward for the last time early on Sunday morning in line with last month’s presidential decree to revert to daylight saving time. Each of this country's nine time zones  put their clocks forward  at 2 am on Sunday.
Russians will set their clocks one hour forward in the early hours of Sunday, March 27th, to put paid to the 30-year old tradition of moving clock hands one hour forward in spring, and one hour backward, in autumn, says the Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
On March 27, time in Russia will be transferred one hour ahead – for the last time now. Russia’s government has finally decided to stop the practice of putting time one hour ahead in the summer and one hour back in the winter, which has lasted for many years.  Russia started this practice in 1917.
On March 27th, the Moscow Kremlin’s Spasskaya Tower clock will for the last time be set forward one hour. The transition to daylight saving time (DTS) was established in 1981 in an attempt to reduce energy consumption.
The United States is switching to daylight saving time at 2:00 a.m. in New York. It will be 10:00 a.m. in Moscow. Time will not change in Arizona, Hawaii, Puerto Rico the Virgins Islands, Guam, Eastern Samoa and the Northern Marianas that use standard time all year round.
German experts support Russia’s decision to abstain from shifting from summer to winter time. They believe that tinkering with the clocks runs counter to a person’s natural biological rhythms, has detrimental health effects and is economically senseless.
President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev has announced his intention to cancel the shift to winter time in his country starting from this autumn. Speaking at the meeting with young scholars in Moscow on Tuesday, Mr. Medvedev said his initiative might have a positive impact on people since the shift in time leads to stress and illnesses.
This country’s ruling United Russia party wants to cancel the annual switch to summer time, which doctors say is bad for the human health leading to stress, bad sleep and weakness. The switch to summer time was introduced here in 1981.
Starting in 2012, Russia may abandon its daylight savings system. An associated proposal by the Russian Ministry of Industry and Trade will be examined by the country’s government in late January-early February.  By order of the ministry, a group of scientists found out that systematic time shifts may negatively affect human body.
We had the time change here in Russia this past weekend, something we are going through twice a year. Why do we have to have it? Is it all about energy efficiency? This is what we are going to talk about in this edition of the program.         
This Sunday, October 31, Russia switches to winter time. At 3 hours local time all across the country the clock is turned back one hour. Seasonal transitions to summer and winter time have no adverse effects on human health, say experts.
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May 2013
Home
Politics
  • At their latest gathering in Amman in Jordan, the nations known as the Friends of Syria accused Russia and Iran of supplying the regime of the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad with modern arms. The actual situation, however, is very different. It is Assad’s Western and Arab foes who rush support, including arms, to one of the sides in the civil war in Syria.

  • US Secretary of State John Kerry called on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Wednesday to make "a commitment to find peace in his country," ahead of a meeting of the Friends of Syria group in Amman.

     

  • As Senate panel votes to provide weapons to rebels battling the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad, many begin to wonder what will happen if those weapons get into the hands of terrorists.

     

World
Russia
  • In the coming three years, the Russian government will spend some 90bln roubles on programmes to speed up social and economic development in depressed rural areas.

  • Ballerina Olga Smirnova, a rising star of Moscow’s Bolshoi Theater, has won a prestigious Benois de la Danse ballet award. She is the only woman in the company of six Benois de la Danse-2013 awardees, the other five being two male dancers and three male choreographers. The awards ceremony preceded the opening of the Benois de la Danse festival in Moscow.

  • The world's largest ever installation featuring 48 portraits of Russian women is on display as part of the “Face and Soul” exhibition at the Historical Museum in Moscow.

Economy
  • The Internal Revenue Service official who this month revealed the U.S. tax agency's targeting of conservative groups asserted her constitutional right not to answer questions before a U.S. congressional committee on Wednesday.

  • The EU energy policy is one of the main topics at the EU summit that is currently underway in Brussels. Among other things, discussions are being unfolding there around the future of the shale gas in Europe. Despite the fact that great hopes are linked with shale gas, concrete decisions have not yet followed. The point is that there are many questions now about the future of the shale gas.

  • The Islamic Development Bank has temporarily suspended Syria’s membership, IDB President Ahmad Mohamed Ali Al Madani announced Wednesday.

Reality Check
  • Bitcoin, the digital cryptocurrency, is starting to attract the attention of the US government. It seems that the American authorities would like to destroy the digital currency before it could become a widespread alternative to the US dollar.

  • David Cameron's woes are continuing this week with plans to legalize same-sex marriage to be debated in Parliament today and tomorrow. The issue is hugely divisive, not least within the Tory Party which seems to have been in open rebellion in the last couple of weeks over everything from the E.U. to the next election. And on Sunday 34 current and former local party chairmen delivered a letter to Downing Street opposing the policy as "flawed, un-Conservative and costing us dearly in votes and membership". Gay marriage is causing a heated row across the political and public spheres.

  • A white-tailed deer crashed through the windshield of a public bus in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. It was filmed by a surveillance camera. (VIDEO)

Society
  • The famous Italian opera house La Scala did not miss out on the celebration of the 200-year anniversary of composer Richard Wagner's birth. Carlo Maria Cella, the head of La Scala's press relations, talked to the Voice of Russia about what Wagner represents for Italy and the entire world.

  • Henri Dutilleux, one of France's leading 20th century composers, has died on Wednesday in Paris at the age of 97, his family announced.

  • The capuchin monkey named Mally, which was seized from Canadian pop-star Justin Bieber by customs officials in Munich in March, officially became property of Germany. Bieber has six weeks to contest the decision.

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