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1995 in Russia

January

  • January 2 - The first Chechen war : in Chechnya, militant groups reflect the offensive of the Russian army on Grozny [1] . In the following days, Russian troops resume the operation.
  • January 3 - First Chechen war : bombardment of Shali with cluster bombs [2] .
  • January 6 - an agreement was signed on the Customs Union between the Republic of Belarus and the Russian Federation [3] .
  • January 7 - the beginning of work on the restoration of the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow.
  • January 8 - On NTV the first issue of the Hundred to One program, an analogue of the American game Family Feud. The host of this program was Alexander Gurevich .
  • January 15 - a series of explosions in Moscow . In Moscow, bombs were detonated at Moscow State Pedagogical University , Physics and Mathematics School No. 354, the Metropol Hotel and the Mosenergo transformer substation No. 510. There were no casualties. After the bombings, the police received an ultimatum from a “group of officers” on the withdrawal of troops from Chechnya [4] .
  • January 19 - First Chechen war : federal troops captured the presidential palace in Grozny [5] .
  • January 20 - Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia signed an agreement on a customs union in Moscow [6] .
  • January 25 - The launch of a meteorological rocket off the coast of Norway [7] posed the world the threat of an exchange of nuclear strikes between Russia and the USA .

June

  • June 30 - the cosmonaut Georgy Timofeevich Beregovoi died [8] (1921-1995)

Notes

  1. ↑ Vladimir Shatov. Breakthrough . - Vladimir Shatov, 2015-01-05. - 647 p.
  2. ↑ Russia (neopr.) . www.hrw.org. Date of appeal October 29, 2018.
  3. ↑ Invest courier . - Publishing House of the All-Russian newspaper "Niva of Russia", 1998. - 684 p.
  4. ↑ Criminal bombings in Moscow (neopr.) (July 29, 1995). Date of appeal October 29, 2018.
  5. ↑ Olga Ruban, Olʹga Baksheeva. Dmitriĭ Kholodov: vzryv: khronika ubiĭstva zhurnalista . - Exim, 1998 .-- 614 p.
  6. ↑ Sam Gu Kang. Ethno-national conflicts in Transcaucasia and Central Asia in the context of their geopolitical position . - Institute of World Economy and International Relations, RAS, 2002. - 210 p.
  7. ↑ Kommersant Publishing House. Kommersant-Vlast . - Kommersant Publishing House, 1999-09-14. - 52 p.
  8. ↑ Leonid S. Popov. Meetings on the Road: Notes by a Journalist . - Chelyabinsk Printing House, 2000. - 640 p.
1995 in Russia
1991 1992 1993 1994 - 1995 - 1996 1997 1998 1999
See also: Other events in 1995
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1995_year_in_Russia&oldid=98021440


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