| September 2007 |
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France's Alain Robert, world famous for climbing skyscrapers with his bare hands, was briefly detained in Moscow Tuesday after reaching the top of the Federation Tower's 242-meter-high west building. 
Russian electricity monopoly Unified Energy System (UES) [RTS: EESR] said Tuesday it had concluded the first stage of the national power sector's reorganization. 
A Swiss court convicted Tuesday four air traffic controllers of criminal negligence that led to the deaths of 71 in an air crash five years ago.

A Russian-made copy of the Koran, etched onto 162 sheets of 99.9% pure gold, worth $5.9 million, will be exhibited in Iran's capital later this month. 
Russia's Ministry of Industry and Energy said Tuesday that a government commission had set the equity capital of the emerging United Shipbuilding Corporation at 1.098 billion rubles ($42.9 million). 
A Moscow military court sanctioned once again the arrest of FSB Lt. Col. Pavel Ryaguzov, a suspect in the murder of journalist Anna Politkovskaya, a court press secretary said Tuesday. 
About 500 chickens in the south Russia's Krasnodar Territory have died of bird flu, a local official said Tuesday. 
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will set out on a 10-day tour this week to Australia, Latin America, and Africa. 
More than 10 metric tons of drugs were seized in a joint operation of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) member states, the Russian anti-drug service said Tuesday. 
Moscow's Tverskoi District Court has ruled that a city ban on holding a Gay Pride Parade May 27, which turned violent when marchers gathered in defiance of the order, was legal, the event's organizer said Tuesday. 



