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Topic: Mikhail Artamonov


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In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Mikhail Artamonov - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mikhail Illarionovich Artamonov (Михаил Илларионович Артамонов in Russian) (1898-1972) was a Soviet historian and archaeologist, who came to be recognized as the founding father of Khazar studies.
Artamonov's scientific career was centered on the Leningrad University.
Artamonov was appointed director of the Hermitage Museum in 1951.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mikhail_Artamonov   (189 words)

  
 Kommersant - Russia's Daily Online
The Domodedovo Court of the Moscow Region sentenced Thursday, June 30, former police captain Mikhail Artamonov to seven-year imprisonment.
Most of them have never believed in Artamonov’s guilt, saying the real party in fault is not the policeman but his direct bosses, who hadn’t properly arranged safety procedures in the airport, as well as East Line that manages it.
On the day of tragedy, August 24, Artamonov was to be especially watchful, because of the act of terror in the bus stop at Kashirskoe highway that heads for Domodedovo airport, the judge said.
www.kommersant.com /pda/doc.asp?id=588254   (453 words)

  
 The State Hermitage Museum: Information
With the publication of Artamonov’s book The History of the Khazars, the State Hermitage and the Philology Department of St. Petersburg State University launched their series entitled The Classics of the Hermitage.
In the foreword to the second edition the director of the State Hermitage M.B. Piotrovsky says that the most important aspect of the museum’s activity is the work it undertakes to explain the logic of unique objects of world culture.
Mikhail Illarionovich Artamonov (1898 - 1972) was the director of the State Hermitage from 1951 to 1964.
www.hermitagemuseum.org /html_En/02/hm2_9_21.html   (170 words)

  
 www.rian.ru
The Domodedovo City Court sentenced Captain Mikhail Artamonov to the maximum sentence for negligence, seven years, because the defendant did not admit guilt.
Artamonov was found guilty of releasing two women, who later turned out to be suicide bombers, without properly searching them at Moscow's Domodedovo International Airport on August 24, 2004.
According to his lawyer, Artamonov intends to appeal the verdict to a higher court.
en.rian.ru /russia/20060126/43199039-print.html   (157 words)

  
 FirstCoast News.com - Print Article
It was the start of a series of deadly terrorist attacks blamed on Chechen rebels that killed nearly 440 people, including the school siege in the southern city of Beslan.
Police Capt. Mikhail Artamonov, arrested earlier this month, was charged with negligence that led to fatalities, Interfax said, quoting prosecutors.
Artamonov is accused of releasing the two women suspected of carrying bombs onto the planes without inspecting their belongings.
www.firstcoastnews.com /printfullstory.aspx?storyid=24798   (211 words)

  
 Police Officer Detained Over Role in Double Terrorist Attack on Planes
Police captain Mikhail Artamonov has been detained on suspicion of being involved in the terrorist attacks on two Russian passenger jets that crashed almost simultaneously on August 24 of this year.
Artamonov is the third suspect to be arrested since the probe was launched.
His arrested was sanctioned by a court of law at the request of the transport prosecutor’s office, a source in law enforcement authorities told the Interfax news agency.
www.prisonplanet.tv /articles/september2004/220904officerdetained.htm   (425 words)

  
 The St. Petersburg Times - News - Policeman Jailed For Plane Bombs
MOSCOW — A Moscow region court on Thursday found airport police Captain Mikhail Artamonov guilty of negligence in the deaths of 90 people in the suicide bombings of two planes last August and sentenced him to seven years in prison, Interfax reported.
Artamonov, 30, was accused of releasing two women suspected of carrying bombs onto two passenger planes in Domodedovo Airport without inspecting their belongings on Aug. 24.
Artamonov’s lawyer Sergei Kazimirov said his client would appeal, Interfax reported.
www.sptimes.ru /index.php?action_id=2&story_id=136   (337 words)

  
 Airport Policeman Sentenced to 7 Years in Jail Over 2004 Double Plane Disaster - NEWS - MOSNEWS.COM   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
The Domodedovo court has found Police Captain Mikhail Artamonov figuring in the case of the bombings of two Russian airliners last summer guilty of negligence, “which results in the death of two or more people” and sentenced him to seven years in jail, Interfax news agency reported.
Then Artamonov was entrusted with checking their luggage and establishing whether they could be involved in terrorist activity.
Mikhail Gorbachev is generally regarded as the man who broke down the “iron curtain” that separated the communist world from the West and thawed the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union.
www.mosnews.com /news/2005/06/30/artamonovtojail.shtml   (720 words)

  
 Articles - Volga-AviaExpress Flight 1303   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
On the day of the bombings they were stopped in the airport by the police captain Mikhail Artamonov to be searched for weapons and for identification.
According to the internal airport police instruction, Artamonov was still supposed to take them to the interrogation room and talk to them longer just because they were Chechen.
As Artamonov pointed out during the trial, that racial-profiling instruction is illegal and unconstitutional.
www.kimia-sains.com /articles/Volga-AviaExpress_Flight_1303   (773 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
The announcements came just as the courts issued an unexpected ruling sentencing Domodedovo Airport police captain Mikhail Artamonov to seven years in prison for failing to check the bags of two female suicide bombers who detonated themselves inside two airplanes over southern Russia.
After the two female suicide bombers arrived at the airport they were detained by policemen and their passports were taken from them.
Then Artamonov, who was then a member of the airport's anti-terrorist unit, was entrusted with checking their luggage and establishing whether they could be involved in terrorist activity.
english.mn.ru /english/printver.php?2005-25-10   (408 words)

  
 Policeman to Answer for Planes’ Explosion - Kommersant Moscow
“I have a feeling that I live in the 1930s, when a man could have been pointed by finger and then “closed,”” Artamonov said, having heard the verdict.
The Domodedovo Court of the Moscow Region sentenced June 30, 2005 former police captain Mikhail Artamonov to seven-year imprisonment.
Artamonov failed to spot two Chechen shakhids August 24, 2004 and 98 people were killed in Tu-154 and Tu-134 explosion.
www.kommersant.com /page.asp?id=588254   (601 words)

  
 Web Review
He now faces criminal charges for failure to take a simple action that may have prevented the country's worst act of terrorism in the air, a spokesman for the office said in a telephone interview.
The four, all believed to be Chechens, had been stopped by the airport police after arriving on a flight from Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, a southern Russian republic that borders Chechnya.
After Captain Artamonov released them, the two bombers - identified as Amanat Nagayeva and Satsita Dzhbirkhanova, or someone traveling under their names - purchased tickets on Sibir Airlines Flight 1047 to Sochi, and Volga AviaExpress Flight 1303 to Volgograd and boarded with the help of at least one bribe of $34.
iskran.iip.net /review/2004/september/4nyt3.html   (728 words)

  
 The Khazar Fortress of Sarkel
We are indebted to the reports of Soviet archaeologists -- including Mikhail I. Artamonov, Svetlana A. Pletnyova, and Pavel A. Rappoport -- who explored the artifacts and architecture of Sarkel during the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s.
The grand fortress of Sarkel, located near the Don River, was built in the 830s by a joint team of Greek and Khazar architects.
"Khazarskaya krepost Sarkel" by Mikhail I. Artamonov, in Acta Archaeologica Hungarica (Budapest), 1956, vol.
www.khazaria.com /sarkel.html   (840 words)

  
 RUSNET :: Russian Officer Sentenced for Negligence
Authorities said two Chechen women smuggled explosives onto the planes, which crashed within minutes of each other on Aug. 24, 2004, killing 90 people.
The Moscow court on Thursday found that Mikhail Artamonov was guilty of "negligence" that "led to the deaths of 90 people.'' Artamonov worked at Moscow's Domededovo airport, where the two flights took off.
The court found that the police captain had failed in his duties for not detaining the Chechen women when they passed through a security check upon their arrival at the airport from the Russian Caucasus, the RIA-Novosti news agency reported.
www.rusnet.nl /news/2005/07/01/print/currentaffairs04.shtml   (185 words)

  
 [No title]
A Sibir Air employee and a ticket scalper were both sentenced to 18-months behind bars for ensuring one of the female bombers was able to purchase a tickeet and get on board the flight without trouble.
Prosecutors originally asked that Moscow Police Captain Mikhail Artamonov be sentenced to six years in prison for allowing the two bombers to get through security without a standard security check.
Artamonov repeatedly said he was innocent -- that he was a scapegoat for lax security and those who were really involved.
www.grangier.fr /news/journal-2005-07-02.txt   (1960 words)

  
 Man Accused of Involvement in Terrorist Acts in Summer of 2004 Pleads Guilty
Besides, Mikhail Artamonov of the Domodedovo police is accused of complicity in exploding the liners.
His case is been examined in separate proceedings.
Prosecutor General Vladimir Ustinov specified earlier that Artamonov let the two women pass without examination, after which the women committed a terrorist act on board the liners.
nyjtimes.com /cover/04-19-05/ManGuiltyOfSummer04TerrorActs.htm   (311 words)

  
 angelicfineart.com
Mikhail Pivovarov has worked as a theatre designer but is better known as one of Kazan 's most important grotesque artists.
He graduated from the fine art department at the Kazan Institute of Arts.
In the 1980s, he associated with Alexander Artamonov, Evgeny Golubtsov, Oleg Ivanov and other artists who lived in the area of Tatarstan.
www.angelicfineart.com /mikhail-pivovarov-i-8.html?osCsid=5ffc3b426078488499771d026d0540f2   (224 words)

  
 BreakingNews.ie - 2005/06/30: Police captain jailed for failing to halt Russian plane bombings   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
The bombings were blamed on two Chechen women, who allegedly smuggled explosives onto the planes.
The Moscow court today found that Mikhail Artamonov was guilty of “negligence” that “led to the deaths of 90 people".
Artamonov worked at Moscow’s Domededovo airport, where the two flights took off on August 24, 2004.
archives.tcm.ie /breakingnews/2005/06/30/story209509.asp   (250 words)

  
 BreakingNews.ie - 2004/09/22: Police captain arrested in airliner bombings probe   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
The Interfax news agency said that Captain Mikhail Artamonov had been arrested and could be held for up to 30 days while authorities decide whether to press charges.
The report did not elaborate on the allegations against Artamonov, the third suspect in the case.
Earlier, Prosecutor General Vladimir Ustinov said a senior police officer at the airport had released the two women suspected of carrying bombs onto the planes without even inspecting their belongings.
archives.tcm.ie /breakingnews/2004/09/22/story167670.asp   (222 words)

  
 Blogger: Email Post to a Friend
Russian officials arrested police captain Mikhail Artamonov on Wednesday in connection with the investigation surrounding the country's pair of plane bombings last month.
Authorities had already arrested an airline ticket scalper and an airline employee who they believe aided two Chechen women in carrying bombs on board the planes.
Under Russian terror laws, Captain Artamonov may be held up to 30 days without formal charges.
www.blogger.com /email-post.g?blogID=4079894&postID=109587913665874305   (129 words)

  
 TA-INDIVIDUALS: Russian Policeman Arrested in Connection with Plane Bombings - Above Top Secret Conspiracy Community   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
A Russian police officer, Captain Mikhail Artamonov, has been arrested and will be held for at least 30 days under Russian anti-terrorism legislation due to suspicions he was involved in last months downing of two Russian commercial planes by Chechen terrorists.
A Russian police captain has been arrested in connection with last month's twin plane bombings by suspected Chechen bombers that killed 90 people, Interfax reported citing sources close to the inquiry.
Captain Mikhail Artamonov was ordered to be detained for 30 days under anti-terrorist legislation.
www.abovetopsecret.com /forum/thread82106/pglastpost   (399 words)

  
 Humanrights   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
The two men -- Nikolai Korenkov and Armen Arutyunyan -- were found to have accepted bribes allowing at least one Chechen woman suicide bomber to board one of the two plane.
Prosecutors also charged Police Captain Mikhail Artamonov with negligence which resulted in the fatal crashes of the two airliners.
The blasts staged by suicide bombers downed a Tupolev-134 plane and a Tupolev-154 airliner in the Tula and Rostov regions at approximately 23:00, Moscow time, 2000 GMT on August 24, 2004.
www.humanrights-china.org /news/2005-4-16/Inter2005416185125.htm   (144 words)

  
 Aviation Security International   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Airport police stopped the women and pulled them aside for further inspection, demonstrating the advantages of profiling techniques, even on racial grounds, over technology.
Their documents were handed over to a (Airport Police) Captain Mikhail Artamonov who was supposed to instigate a baggage, body and background check on them.
Seemingly, he released them without further inspection and they proceeded to buy tickets, from a ticket tout, for flights later that evening.
www.asi-mag.com /editorials/oct2004.htm   (1183 words)

  
 Relatives of Russian Plane Crash Victims Appeal to Strasbourg Court :. News :. THE CHECHEN TIMES   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
The accused are charged with accepting a bribe and aiding terrorists.
Former airport policeman Mikhail Artamonov, an employee of the Sibir airline Nikolai Korenkov, and a resident of Krasnodar Armen Arutunyan were arrested in September.
The two civilians allegedly helped two Chechen women board the planes, and the police captain failed to check the women’s identities when the first arrived in Moscow.
www.chechentimes.org /en/news?id=26680   (298 words)

  
 Russia Reform Monitor No. 1196, September 26, 2004   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Wen also signed a joint communiqué with Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov on bilateral oil and gas projects, including the construction of an oil pipeline from Russia to China and joint projects to develop oil and gas fields in both countries.
Police captain Mikhail Artamonov was charged with negligence for releasing two Chechen women who had been detained briefly and then allegedly went on to explode bombs on board the planes.
Armen Arutunyan allegedly helped the two women get tickets for the flights, for which they paid him 5,000 rubles (about $171), while Nikolai Korenkov, a Sibir Airlines official, allegedly received a bribe from Arutunyan to ensure that the women got on board the ill-fated planes.
www.afpc.org /rrm/rrm1196.shtml   (614 words)

  
 Analysis: Russia -- Between Terror And Corruption - RADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Ustinov also said that both women arrived earlier the same day from Daghestan and were briefly detained by airport security as suspicious people.
They were brought to Mikhail Artamonov, the Interior Ministry officer in charge of counterterrorism at the airport, but he released them without examining them.
The school hostage taking in Beslan on 1-3 September was the worst terrorist incident in modern Russian history, leaving at least 338 dead and more than 700 injured.
www.rferl.org /featuresarticle/2004/9/3CAB44EC-DA1D-4A9A-9366-D66C2381C27C.html   (1675 words)

  
 Police captain arrested over Russian air bombings
Russian news agency Interfax said captain Mikhail Artamonov had been arrested and under anti-terrorist legislation could be held for up to 30 days before being charged.
Artamonov is the third suspect named in connection with the bombings, following the arrest of a ticket scalper and an airline employee.
Russian officials suspect two Chechen women of having carried the bombs on to the planes.
www.travelweekly.com.au /articles/c5/0c0277c5.asp   (382 words)

  
 The State Hermitage Museum: Services
State Hermitage; editorial board - G.V.Vilinbakhov, L.M. Vikhrova, N.V.Kalyazina, Mikhail Piotrovsky; St Petersburg, 1998; 59 pages; 22 x 15 cm; bibliography at the end of each article.
State Hermitage; scholarly editor Yuri Piotrovsky; preface and preparation of of text, note and conception of edition - I.A.Bogdanov; St Petersburg, 1998; illustrated; 1 sheet - portrait; 22 x 16 cm; bibliography in the note, p.
International Scholarly Conference in Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of Dr Mikhail Artamonov 's birth
www.hermitagemuseum.org /html_En/00/hm0_5_14_1.html   (584 words)

  
 [No title]
Hammadi Afandi, detained in Spain since July in connection with the March 11 train bombings, has been released but had to hand in his passport and charges were not dropped.
Mikhail Artamonov, a Russian police captain, has been detained in connection with the August plane bombings.
Sajid Badat pleaded not guilty in British court to charges of conspiring to blow up an aircraft and possessing an explosive.
www.terrorismcentral.com /Newsletters/2004/092604.html   (5231 words)

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