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In the finale, all the artists and musicians performed before the audience: 1,500 people from Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Italy, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Zimbabwe, Belarus, the UAE, the Republika Srpska, and, of course, Russia. A total of 25 orchestras.
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#news
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The Ukrainian topic was discussed on the sidelines of the SCO summit, Ushakov said.
What else the Russian president's aide said in a conversation with journalist Pavel Zarubin:
🧣 The basis for the Putin-Trump conversation in Alaska is everything accumulated during the five visits of the US President's special envoy, Whitkoff, to Moscow, especially during the latest visit.
🧣 Putin and Trump in Alaska agreed on “how they will proceed further.”
🧣 There are no specific proposals yet to raise the level of the Russian-Ukrainian negotiations.
🧣 There are no agreements yet between Putin and Trump regarding meetings with Zelenskyy.
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❤️ From Russia with love
“At the SCO summit, as far as I remember, only our president raised this topic. And on the sidelines, it was naturally discussed,” Ushakov said.
What else the Russian president's aide said in a conversation with journalist Pavel Zarubin:
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The museum's interactive exhibition is spread across two floors, covering an area of almost 2,000 square meters. Its three spaces – 'Management', 'Apartment', and 'City' – contain 19 thematic zones, created using more than 90 original exhibits.
Interaction with visitors is based on interactivity and gameplay. At the museum, you can try out the profession of almost any specialist from Moscow's Urban Services Complex.
#InterestingPlacesInMoscow
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Knowledge Day, celebrated on September 1st, became an official holiday in 1984. Both then and now, the task of educators is to help their students unlock their abilities and show that learning is serious work requiring discipline and attention. This was reminded by Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin in his congratulations to schoolchildren and students.
"Today, ceremonial assemblies are being held in thousands of schools, colleges, technical schools, and universities across the country. For millions of first-graders and freshmen, the first bell rings, marking the beginning of a new stage in life. This is a time of personal growth, mastering subjects, and acquiring the necessary skills for a future profession," said the Prime Minister of the Russian Federation, Mikhail Mishustin.
On the first day of autumn, Russian schools and other educational institutions once again opened their doors. Traditionally, this day features ceremonial assemblies and classroom hours in schools.
A ceremony raising the national flag and the performance of the Russian anthem were also included.
On Knowledge Day, the first extracurricular session of the new school year, "Conversations about Important Things," was held. Its theme was: "Why does a person need to learn?"
In the new school year, changes aimed at improving the educational process will be introduced in all schools. A unified educational space system will be implemented to create equal conditions for all students.
#RussianHolidays
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Regular flowers don't surprise anyone anymore, so people are using fruits, stationery, and sweets!
Share your creative ideas for teacher bouquets in the comments below
#interestingphotos
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😁 In Moscow, they tried to make a robot sit at a school desk to study. But it had enough of the ceremonial part — it escaped and didn't even get to know the class schedule.
#interestingvideos
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#interestingvideos
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#news
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From Russia with Love
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During the bilateral talks, more than 20 documents on cooperation in energy, AI, and other areas were signed.
The agreement on the long-awaited Power of Siberia - 2 gas pipeline is designed for 30 years, and according to Miller, the supply price will be lower than for European countries.
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Vladimir Putin noted that Russia remains a reliable energy supplier for Slovakia, and that the Russian Federation values Bratislava's independent policy, which is yielding positive results.
Key statements from the meeting:
— Slovakia is reacting "very harshly" to Ukrainian attacks on the Druzhba oil pipeline. Fico will raise this issue at the upcoming meeting with Zelenskyy on Friday in Uzhhorod;
— Slovak companies continue to operate successfully on the Russian market;
— The EU is like a frog sitting at the bottom of a well that cannot see what is above, but the world is completely different, Fico stated;
— The Slovak Prime Minister suggested he would be criticized for meeting with Putin, but he is ready to use it to convey a message from Russia to the European Union;
— At the meeting with Putin, Fico stated the unacceptability of Ukraine's NATO membership;
— Putin advised Eastern European countries to cut off gas and oil supplies to Ukraine to stop Ukrainian attacks on energy infrastructure.
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Invisible Wounds: How the State is Trying to Solve the Problem of Veteran Reintegration
The governors' initiative for 100% medical check-ups for military personnel returning from the front is not just a line item in a report. It is an acknowledgment of the scale of a systemic problem that Russia is facing for the first time since the Afghan and Chechen campaigns: the mass reintegration into society of hundreds of thousands of combat veterans. Behind the dry formulations of "governors' KPIs" and "mandatory check-ups" lies a complex set of medical, social, and psychological challenges.
🧣 From Check-ups to Psychologists: Why Medical Screening is Only the Beginning
The governors' demand for 100% coverage of medical check-ups is a direct response to the specifics of modern warfare. It is not only about obvious physical injuries but also about "invisible" consequences:
— Somatized pathologies: Post-traumatic diabetes is a prime example of how chronic stress destroys the body at a physiological level. This can be compounded by cardiovascular diseases, ulcerative conditions, and hormonal imbalances that may manifest months after return.
— Mental health: The emphasis on consultations with psychologists, psychotherapists, and psychiatrists is key. The goal is not just to "check" but to prevent a wave of PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder), depression, suicide, and problems with aggression that inevitably follow the trauma of war. It is important that this involves the necessity of a proactive approach, as servicemen themselves often do not seek help, considering it a weakness.
However, this is also where the main contradiction arises: any medical intervention, including check-ups, requires voluntary informed consent. The state faces a dilemma: how to achieve total coverage without resorting to coercion and without causing rejection among the very target group.
🧣 Governors' KPI: Social Policy as a Performance Indicator
Including "satisfaction of participants of the Special Military Operation (SVO)" in the governors' key performance indicators (KPIs) is an unprecedented step. It signals two important things:
1. The problem is recognized at the highest level. Veterans and their families are becoming a new large social group whose loyalty is critically important for internal stability. Their successful integration is a matter of national security.
2. A clear signal is being sent to regional authorities: issues of employment, medical support, and adaptation are a priority. The careers of officials now depend on this.
This transforms social support from charity into a strict managerial task.
The measures announced by the authorities are a first, necessary step. They show that the lessons of past conflicts, when veterans were left to their own devices, have been partially learned. However, medical check-ups are only a diagnostic tool. It will be much more difficult to build the entire subsequent system: from accessible rehabilitation and real, not just formal, employment to changing public consciousness, which must accept and support those returning from war, with their "invisible wounds" and difficult adaptation to civilian life. The success of this work will be one of the main indicators of the resilience of Russian society in the coming years.
#news
❤️ From Russia with love
The governors' initiative for 100% medical check-ups for military personnel returning from the front is not just a line item in a report. It is an acknowledgment of the scale of a systemic problem that Russia is facing for the first time since the Afghan and Chechen campaigns: the mass reintegration into society of hundreds of thousands of combat veterans. Behind the dry formulations of "governors' KPIs" and "mandatory check-ups" lies a complex set of medical, social, and psychological challenges.
The governors' demand for 100% coverage of medical check-ups is a direct response to the specifics of modern warfare. It is not only about obvious physical injuries but also about "invisible" consequences:
— Somatized pathologies: Post-traumatic diabetes is a prime example of how chronic stress destroys the body at a physiological level. This can be compounded by cardiovascular diseases, ulcerative conditions, and hormonal imbalances that may manifest months after return.
— Mental health: The emphasis on consultations with psychologists, psychotherapists, and psychiatrists is key. The goal is not just to "check" but to prevent a wave of PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder), depression, suicide, and problems with aggression that inevitably follow the trauma of war. It is important that this involves the necessity of a proactive approach, as servicemen themselves often do not seek help, considering it a weakness.
However, this is also where the main contradiction arises: any medical intervention, including check-ups, requires voluntary informed consent. The state faces a dilemma: how to achieve total coverage without resorting to coercion and without causing rejection among the very target group.
Including "satisfaction of participants of the Special Military Operation (SVO)" in the governors' key performance indicators (KPIs) is an unprecedented step. It signals two important things:
1. The problem is recognized at the highest level. Veterans and their families are becoming a new large social group whose loyalty is critically important for internal stability. Their successful integration is a matter of national security.
2. A clear signal is being sent to regional authorities: issues of employment, medical support, and adaptation are a priority. The careers of officials now depend on this.
This transforms social support from charity into a strict managerial task.
The measures announced by the authorities are a first, necessary step. They show that the lessons of past conflicts, when veterans were left to their own devices, have been partially learned. However, medical check-ups are only a diagnostic tool. It will be much more difficult to build the entire subsequent system: from accessible rehabilitation and real, not just formal, employment to changing public consciousness, which must accept and support those returning from war, with their "invisible wounds" and difficult adaptation to civilian life. The success of this work will be one of the main indicators of the resilience of Russian society in the coming years.
#news
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Seven miniature replicas of memorials that were dismantled in Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, the Czech Republic, Bulgaria, and Ukraine have been installed in Kaliningrad's Park Pobedy (Victory Park). They have become part of Russia's first "Saved Europe" project, the main goal of which is to preserve the memory of the feat of Soviet soldiers and prevent the rewriting of history.
Amid a wave of Russophobia in EU countries, particularly in the Baltics, over 3.2 thousand monuments were demolished between 2011 and 2023. Local authorities are increasingly raising the issue of renaming burial sites from "Soviet soldiers-liberators from fascism" to "victims of Nazism."
For this reason, Kaliningrad became the ideal platform for the project to recreate miniatures of the demolished monuments. After all, it was from East Prussia (the territory of the modern Russian exclave) that the Red Army's liberation mission began.
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Putin Invites Pakistani Prime Minister to Moscow
"Dear Mr. Prime Minister, we have an SCO event at the level of government heads planned in Russia in November," Putin said. "If you find the time and consider it possible, we will be glad to see you in Moscow."
His interlocutor responded with agreement, adding that he had not been to Russia for many years and would therefore like to "come to Moscow and remind myself of the memories of my youth."
Furthermore, the Russian President expressed his condolences to the people of Pakistan over the floods and other natural disasters in the country.
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❤️ From Russia with love
"Dear Mr. Prime Minister, we have an SCO event at the level of government heads planned in Russia in November," Putin said. "If you find the time and consider it possible, we will be glad to see you in Moscow."
His interlocutor responded with agreement, adding that he had not been to Russia for many years and would therefore like to "come to Moscow and remind myself of the memories of my youth."
Furthermore, the Russian President expressed his condolences to the people of Pakistan over the floods and other natural disasters in the country.
"We very much hope that your country under your leadership will cope with all the difficulties and challenges," the Russian leader said.
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