chechnya
New reporting has put the Chechen warlord's health in the headlines once more. But there are other, subtler, signs that the republic might be preparing for a regime change. Chechen warlord Ramzan Kadyrov is used to speculation about his imminent demise. Pundits have discussed the 47-year-old's failing health since September when the Chechen leader disappeared from the public eye, andrumors began to circulate that he was seriously unwell. In the months since Kadyrov's appearance had changed, his face appeared swollen, and his words sometimes slurred. Russian news outletNovaya Gazeta Europe repo...
Kyiv Independent (UK)
New reporting has put the Chechen warlord's health in the headlines once more. But there are other, subtler, signs that the republic might be preparing for a regime change. Chechen warlord Ramzan Kadyrov is used to speculation about his imminent demise. Pundits have discussed the 47-year-old's failing health since September when the Chechen leader disappeared from the public eye, andrumors began to circulate that he was seriously unwell. In the months since Kadyrov's appearance had changed, his face appeared swollen, and his words sometimes slurred. Russian news outletNovaya Gazeta Europe repo...
Kyiv Independent
New reporting has put the Chechen warlord's health in the headlines once more. But there are other, subtler, signs that the republic might be preparing for a regime change. Chechen warlord Ramzan Kadyrov is used to speculation about his imminent demise. Pundits have discussed the 47-year-old's failing health since September when the Chechen leader disappeared from the public eye, andrumors began to circulate that he was seriously unwell. In the months since Kadyrov's appearance had changed, his face appeared swollen, and his words sometimes slurred. Russian news outletNovaya Gazeta Europe repo...
Kyiv Independent (CA)
"Were you rushing? Or were you dragging?" It really matters. The Russian republic of Chechnya is said to have ruled that all music should "correspond to a tempo of 80 to 116 beats per minute (BPM)" - meaning a lot of modern western music would be banned from being played publicly in the conservative Islamic society. The new standard of music is relatively slow compared to a lot of modern-day pop music, as well as electro, rave, dubstep and techno music – which tends to be of a higher BPM. Most pop songs range from 100 to 130 BPM, a tempo commonly used to create catchy and danceable rhythm. For...
Euronews (English)
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