Russia said goodbye on Friday to a huge remnant of the Soviet era when President Vladimir Putin signed into law a code that will make it legal to own land.
The code will allow Russians and foreigners to buy commercial and residential land (farmland is excluded). The Kremlin says this will hasten economic reform and attract more foreign investment. Critics say it will allow rich businessmen to buy up the country on the cheap. Though Russians have been able to buy property since the breakup of the Soviet Union 10 years ago, they have not been able to buy the land it is built on.
Attempts to adopt a similar land code in another former Soviet state, Ukraine, led to Communist MPs storming out of parliament yesterday in protest at what they said was a rigged vote, Reuters reported from Kiev. The Ukrainian Communists said they would appeal to the constitutional court about the bill, voted through by a slim majority on Thursday.
There has been no law allowing the sale of land in Russia since the Bolsheviks nationalised everything after seizing power in 1917.
But there have been unofficial sales of land, and the Russian government estimates that these cost it between US$994 million and US$2 billion a year in lost taxes.
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A Ministry of Foreign Affairs official yesterday said that a delegation that visited China for an APEC meeting did not receive any kind of treatment that downgraded Taiwan’s sovereignty. Department of International Organizations Director-General Jonathan Sun (孫儉元) said that he and a group of ministry officials visited Shenzhen, China, to attend the APEC Informal Senior Officials’ Meeting last month. The trip went “smoothly and safely” for all Taiwanese delegates, as the Chinese side arranged the trip in accordance with long-standing practices, Sun said at the ministry’s weekly briefing. The Taiwanese group did not encounter any political suppression, he said. Sun made the remarks when
The Taiwanese passport ranked 33rd in a global listing of passports by convenience this month, rising three places from last month’s ranking, but matching its position in January last year. The Henley Passport Index, an international ranking of passports by the number of designations its holder can travel to without a visa, showed that the Taiwan passport enables holders to travel to 139 countries and territories without a visa. Singapore’s passport was ranked the most powerful with visa-free access to 192 destinations out of 227, according to the index published on Tuesday by UK-based migration investment consultancy firm Henley and Partners. Japan’s and
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