Tuesday, 28 March 2023

LIVE UPDATES - Armed Woman Kills 6 in Nashville School

LIVE UPDATES - Armed Woman Kills 6 in Nashville School

LIVE UPDATES - Armed Woman Kills 6 in Nashville School




Employees being escorted from YouTube’s headquarters in San Bruno, Calif., on April 3, 2018, after a woman fatally shot three people there before killing herself.Credit...Jim Wilson/The New York Times






The heavily armed female assailant was a former student, the police say.



A heavily armed woman entered a Christian school in Nashville on Monday morning and fatally shot three children and three staff members before she was shot and killed by the police, the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department said.







According to the initial findings of an investigation, the woman, who was 28 and lived in the Nashville area, was “at one point a student” at the school, although it was unclear when, John Drake, the Nashville police chief, said at a news conference.





The school, the Covenant School, was founded in 2001, and serves about 200 students from preschool through 6th grade, according to its website.


The woman entered the building through a side door, armed with two assault-style rifles and a handgun, and went from the first floor to the second floor, firing “multiple shots,” Don Aaron, a spokesman for the Police Department said.


When officers arrived, they heard gunshots on the second floor, he said. Once there, members of a five-person team saw the woman firing, Mr. Aaron said. Two members of the team opened fire, killing her, he said.



Here’s what else to know:



▪︎President Biden addressed the deadly shooting, calling the deaths of six people, including three elementary school children, “sick,” and pushing Congress to do more to enact gun-control legislation.


▪︎John Howser, a spokesman for Vanderbilt University Medical Center, said that three pediatric patients with gunshot wounds had been taken to Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt and were pronounced dead after arrival. Three staff members were also killed, the police said.


▪︎A police officer was also injured by cut glass at the scene.







It is rare for a woman to commit a mass shooting

Female assailants in mass shootings in the United States — like the one that occurred on Monday in Nashville — are extremely rare, according to the Violence Project, which maintains a national database of mass shootings dating to 1966.


In a data set of 172 mass shootings, defined as involving four victims or more and collected before Monday’s case, only four assailants were women or girls. In two cases, women acted alongside a man.


The scene outside a nearby church that had been set up as a reunification area for parents to meet their children.Credit...Desiree Rios/The New York Times


The rarity of female aggressors in mass shootings reflects a broader trend: Between 80 and 90 percent of all offenders in homicide cases in any given year are men, according to the Violence Project.


“The female issue is amazingly rare,” said Robert Louden, a retired New York City police officer and a professor emeritus of criminal justice at Georgian Court University, in Lakewood, N.J.


Female offenders in homicide cases are often associated with domestic violence, Professor Louden said


“Women do kill somebody who had been an abuser,” he said, adding: “Women do not kill or shoot or hold hostages as much as men do. It’s few and far between.”


The archetypical mass shooter is young and male.


Six of the nine deadliest mass shootings in the United States since 2018 were by people who were 21 or younger, representing a shift for mass casualty shootings, which before 2000 were most often initiated by men in their mid-20s, 30s and 40s.


An F.B.I. study of 160 “active shooter” episodes between 2000 and 2013 found that only six, or 3.8 percent, involved female assailants.


In more recent years, there have been several high-profile outliers to the trend of mass shootings committed by young, male gunmen.








In May 2021, a sixth-grade girl brought a gun to her Idaho middle school and wounded two students and a custodian before she was disarmed by a teacher. The shooter, who was not identified because she was a minor, was sentenced to a juvenile corrections center.


In April 2018, Nasim Najafi Aghdam, who the police said was in her late 30s, walked into YouTube’s corporate headquarters in San Bruno, Calif., on the northern edge of Silicon Valley, fatally shooting three people before killing herself. The police said Ms. Aghdam’s anger over what she believed to be unfair treatment by YouTube had set her on a 500-mile drive from her home near San Diego to YouTube’s offices.



Biden calls on Congress to pass an assault weapons ban. That is unlikely.



President Biden addressed the deadly shooting in Nashville on Monday, calling the deaths of six people, including three elementary school children, “a family’s worst nightmare,” and urging Congress to enact gun-control legislation.


“The shooter in this situation reportedly had two assault weapons and a pistol,” Mr. Biden said during a small-business event at the White House, referring to reports by local officials. “So I call on Congress, again, to pass my assault weapons ban. It’s about time that we begin to make some progress.”


Mr. Biden has repeatedly called for such a ban in recent public speeches and visits, including during a recent visit to Monterey Park, Calif., where a gunman killed 11 people at a dance studio in January. His remarks on Monday once again highlighted not only the scourge of mass shootings in America, but also the limits of his power to address them.


Even with majorities in both houses of Congress during Mr. Biden’s first two years in office, Democrats were unable to pass a ban, and any effort now would be all but certain to die in the Republican-controlled House. That has left Mr. Biden with few options but the bully pulpit.


As a senator in 1994, Mr. Biden negotiated a 10-year assault weapons ban as part of a broader crime bill. That led to a temporary drop in gun crime and shootings of police officers, according to a study by the Justice Department. The ban blocked the sale of 19 weapons similar to those used by the United States military, including semiautomatic rifles and certain types of shotguns and handguns, and it was opposed by Republicans and the National Rifle Association.


Last summer, Congress passed a bipartisan bill that bolstered background checks for potential gun buyers under the age of 21 and pumped federal money into states to put in place so-called red flag laws, which allow officials to temporarily confiscate guns from people found in court to be unfit to possess them. Last month, the Justice Department announced a $200 million program to fund state crisis intervention programs in an effort to reduce gun violence.


The bill was considered a compromise, and Democrats said it fell far short of the sort of assault weapons ban that Mr. Biden has proposed. This year, Republican lawmakers have introduced several bills that would expand access to guns, including a proposal backed by Senate Republicans that would codify the right of Americans to carry guns outside of their homes and use them for self-defense.


Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, told reporters at a news briefing on Monday that there were no plans for Mr. Biden to address congressional Republicans directly on the issue.


“The president calls on Congress to do something before another child is senselessly killed in another act of gun violence,” Ms. Jean-Pierre said.


Earlier this month, the Gun Violence Archive, a nonprofit research group, said that, since the beginning of the year, the United States had surpassed 100 mass shootings, defined as those in which at least four people were killed or injured.



How political leaders and gun control groups have responded to the shooting



The shooting at a Christian school in Nashville on Monday in which a woman killed six people, including three children, prompted an outpouring of condolences that spanned party lines — but also a big dose of frustration that gun violence continues to plague American life.


“Enough is enough,” Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said Monday. How many children have to be murdered before Republicans will support passing an assault weapons ban, she asked.


Kris Brown, the president of Brady: United Against Gun Violence, one of the country’s oldest gun control groups, denounced the frequency of mass shootings and urged people never to grow inured to them.


“We do not have to live like this, nor should we ever accept this as our reality,” Ms. Brown said in a statement. “Our children deserve a life free from worry of being gunned down while learning their ABC’s.”


Representative Andy Ogles, Republican of Tennessee, who represents the district where the Covenant School is, said that he and his family were “devastated by the tragedy” and that, as a father of three, he was particularly distraught by “this senseless act of violence.”


In 2021, Mr. Ogles posted a photo of his family to Facebook with he and his wife — and two of his three children — holding firearms.


Senator Marsha Blackburn, Republican of Tennessee, said on Twitter that she was “heartbroken,” and that her office had been in contact with the authorities



The Covenant School is a small academy housed at a Presbyterian church



A police officer walked by an entrance to The Covenant School after a mass shooting in Nashville on MondayCredit...John Amis/Associated Press


The Covenant School in Nashville is a small, private Christian school, with an enrollment of around 200 students in preschool through sixth grade.


The school is “intentionally small” with an emphasis on relationships, according to its website, and the school boasts a teacher-to-student ratio of 8-to-1. Tuition costs around $16,000 a year.


The school was founded in 2001 as a ministry of the Covenant Presbyterian Church, according to the school’s website. The two share a location.


Even as school shootings become more frequent, the shooting at Covenant was unusual on several counts.


Many of the highest-profile school shootings in recent years have taken place at public schools, in part because there are far more public schools in the United States: Nearly 100,000, compared to about 30,000 private schools.


Shootings at elementary schools are also relatively uncommon, making up less than 20 percent of all incidents of gun violence on school grounds, according to the K-12 School Shooting Database. Most incidents of gun violence on school campuses, including active shooter incidents, happen at high schools.


And it is not typical for a female shooter to carry out school shootings. The typical perpetrator is a white man in his teens or early 20s.


Still, the shooting in Nashville was just one of several instances of gun violence on school campuses in the last week alone. A 16-year-old was fatally shot last Monday morning before classes began at a high school in Arlington, Texas. On Wednesday, a 17-year-old student shot two administrators and later killed himself in Denver.


While those involved fewer than four victims and so were not considered mass shootings, “every one of these incidents has a profound impact on everyone involved in the entire school shooting, and they are happening, like, every day,” said David Riedman, the researcher behind the K-12 School Shooting Database, which tracks gun incidents on school grounds and has found campus gun violence to be increasing in frequency.


More than 270 people were fatally shot or wounded in shootings on school grounds last year, compared to 159 in 2018, the year of the school shooting in Parkland, Fla., according to the database.














Germany’s 18 Leopard 2 tanks delivered to Ukraine — Der Spiegel

Germany’s 18 Leopard 2 tanks delivered to Ukraine — Der Spiegel




Leopard 2 tank
©AP Photo/ Martin Meissner






Ukraine has received 18 German Leopard 2 main battle tanks, as promised by Germany, Spiegel reported on Monday.







According to Spiegel, Ukraine also received approximately 40 Marder armored infantry fighting vehicles. The German government is not disclosing the exact delivery route of military equipment for security reasons.


Earlier, Poland became the first country to deliver the first tranche of Leopard-2 tanks to Ukraine on the first anniversary of the war.


Polish PM Mateusz Morawiecki, who visited Ukraine on the first anniversary of Ukrainian resistance, announced that the first four of fourteen Leopard-2 tanks promised by his country were now on Ukrainian soil.


The Prime Minister tweeted: “Poland, as the country that was the first to successfully build this coalition of Leopards, today also wants, as the first European country, to give you @ZelenskyyUa the first 4 Leopards.”


Poland has also announced that the country would arm Ukraine with 60 PT-91 Twardy tanks “within a few days,” as the Polish PAP news agency reported. Other countries that have pledged their tanks are yet to decide on a timeline for delivery, which is expected to be staggered and erratic. Experts caution that the numbers and speed of delivering these tanks are still less than desirable.


The jubilation was evident in Kyiv, with the Ukrainian and Polish officials posing in front of the tanks.


The Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov even climbed on top of one of these tanks and tweeted: “Together with PMs @Denys_Shmyhal and @MorawieckiM met new beasties in our Ukrainian military zoo – 4 Leopard2A4!” Reznikov tweeted Friday. “We are looking forward to hosting more of them. Food and leisure will be provided.”







Earlier, there were concerns that the number of Leopard-2 tanks being delivered was fewer than pledged and would not make for game-changer equipment on the battlefield. However, other NATO allies are slowly stepping up and promising tanks out of their fleets, hoping to change that.



Leopards On Prowl!



Earlier, German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius claimed that the western allies were encountering trouble assembling two battalions (about 80 tanks) of Leopard 2 tanks to deliver to Ukraine as promised in late January. The numbers have reportedly fallen grossly short now.


On his part, Chancellor Sholz said in an emotionally charged speech at the Munich Conference that commitment from other Leopard suppliers appears to have waned significantly since Berlin gave official approval for the transfer of Leopard-2 tanks from inventories of third countries.


He said, “all those who can supply battle tanks of this kind should now actually do so.” The Leopard-2 tanks are the most widely used in Europe, with military experts emphasizing on several occasions that a sizeable number could be put together for Ukraine if allies make decent contributions.


Several allies are now rising to the occasion and offering different variants of the Leopard-2 tanks from their respective stocks. On the first anniversary of the Russian invasion, Sweden’s Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson and defense minister Pal Jonson announced Stockholm’s decision to send up to 10 Leopard 2A5 tanks.


“The Swedish tanks reinforce the Leopard 2 contribution other European countries make. Coordination of support is ongoing with international partners donating Leopard 2 or other tanks,” the Swedish government said in a statement.


Earlier, Canada had promised to deliver four Leopard-2A4 tanks to Ukraine from its arsenal. However, it has now doubled its contribution and pledged four additional tanks.








The Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office said in a statement, “Prime Minister Trudeau announced that Canada will provide four additional Leopard 2 main battle tanks to support the Armed Forces of Ukraine in defense of their country, growing our contribution to eight tanks in total.”


Two European countries made their pledges on the eve of the anniversary. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez announced he would send 10 Leopard-2 tanks to Ukraine on his second visit to Kyiv.


On the same day, Finland announced it would transfer three Leopard-2 tanks from its stock. Norway has also announced that it would donate eight vehicles and four “special purpose tanks.”


German Defense Ministry announced on February 24 that it would send 18 Leopard-2 main battle tanks to Ukraine, four more than initially planned, a commitment it fulfilled today.















Nashville Covenant School shooting: Three children and suspect dead

Nashville Covenant School shooting: Three children and suspect dead

Nashville Covenant School shooting: Three children and suspect dead




Police are responding to a report of multiple people shot at Covenant School in Nashville






Three children died Monday in a shooting at The Covenant School in Nashville, according to officials with Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Police said officers shot and killed the shooter, who was not immediately identified.







All three children were pronounced dead after arriving at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, according to a hospital spokesman.


The shooting unfolded Monday morning at the Covenant School, a Christian school for students in preschool through sixth grade






John Howser, from Vanderbilt University Medical Center, told media: "three paediatric patients were transported to Monroe Carell Jr Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt, all having suffered gunshot wounds".


He later confirmed that all three children had died.


The incident was first reported when Metro Nashville Police Department tweeted: "An active shooter event has taken place at Covenant School, Covenant Presbyterian Church, on Burton Hills Dr.




"The shooter was engaged by MNPD and is dead. Student reunification with parents is at Woodmont Baptist Church, 2100 Woodmont Blvd."


"The shooter was engaged by MNPD and is dead. Student reunification with parents is at Woodmont Baptist Church, 2100 Woodmont Blvd."







The attack took place at Covenant Presbyterian School, WKRN reported.


The Nashville Fire Department wrote on Twitter that there were "multiple patients", though their conditions are currently unknown.


It also hasn't been established whether the victims were pupils, teachers or staff at the school.


Children were reportedly seen being led away from the school in a line by police.




Local media outlets and ABC report that three children were taken to hospital with gunshot wounds and were pronounced dead, citing sources at the local Vanderbilt University Medical Center.


An image shared to social media by Peyton Kennedy, a reporter for Nashville's WKRN News 2, purportedly shows students being escorted away from the school.


The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) has said it is participating in the investigation.


The Covenant School in Nashville, where the incident took place, is a private Christian school for students in pre-school through the sixth grade, when students are roughly 11 or 12 years old.


The school is reported to have held an active shooter training program in 2022.








According to its website, the school has approximately 200 students. Local media reported that it implemented an "active shooter" programme in 2022.


In a statement, Tennessee's House Democratic Caucus said that its members are "praying for the children and their families who were shooting victims at the Covenant School".


"Our thoughts are with the families of the entire school community and surrounding neighbourhood," Chairman John Ray Clemmons said.


Freddie O'Connell, a Nashville mayoral candidate, said that Nashville has now "joined the communities that have experienced a school shooting".


According to data compiled by Education Week, there were 12 school shootings in 2023 through 23 March that have resulted in deaths or injuries in the US.


On Monday morning, “an active shooter event” occurred at the Covenant School, a private Christian school at Covenant Presbyterian Church. Students were directed to reconnect with their parents at a nearby church, per a post on Metro Nashville Police Department’s Twitter


The shooter died after being “engaged by” officers, Metro Nashville Police said in a statement. It is currently unclear how the shooter died. The public affairs office for the Nashville Police department told Rolling Stone the officers were in the field and could not confirm details on those injured or dead outside of the information provided by the police via Twitter. FBI special agents have also responded to the scene and are assisting local authorities.














Monday, 27 March 2023

China, India, other nations say no to Western hegemony — Lavrov

China, India, other nations say no to Western hegemony — Lavrov

China, India, other nations say no to Western hegemony — Lavrov




©Russian Foreign Ministry/TASS






China and India, as well as a number of other states on the Eurasian continent, in the Asia-Pacific region, in the Middle East, Africa and Latin America do not intend to help the West maintain hegemony on the global arena, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told a meeting of the board of guardians of the Alexander Gorchakov Public Diplomacy Fund on Monday.







Today's world is multipolar and "few want to pull chestnuts out of the fire for former parent states in the current conditions," to the detriment of their national interests, the top diplomat noted. "It is therefore quite natural that about three-quarters of the world's states have not joined the anti-Russian sanctions. All of them have taken a balanced position on the situation in and around Ukraine," Lavrov said.


According to him, such countries as China and India, many states of the Eurasian continent, the Asia-Pacific region, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America "understand perfectly well what this is all about." "And they do not want to compromise their legitimate national interests for the sake of helping the Anglo-Saxons and their associates maintain their hegemony or, to be more precise, try to retain their hegemony on the global arena," Lavrov stressed.


With this in mind, Lavrov focused on President Xi Jinping’s visit to Moscow, which "demonstrated to the entire international community that attempts ‘to divide and conquer’ are doomed to fail." "Despite the dirty campaign to cancel everything connected with Russia, we still have many friends in every country in the world, including in the West. We know that they like our multinational country, love Russian culture, and share the traditional moral and family values we promote," the top diplomat summed up.



Russia saved US from disintegration twice, unreasonable to do it now — security official



Russia saved the US from disintegration at least twice in history, but it would not be reasonable to help the US preserve its integrity this time, Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolay Patrushev said in an interview for Rossiyskaya Gazeta.


"[Russia] save the US itself at least twice - during the War of Independence and the Civil War. But I believe that it would be unreasonable to help the US preserve its own integrity this time," Patrushev said.


The Security Council Secretary underscored that the Russian centuries-old culture is based on spirituality, compassion and mercy.


"Russia is a historic protector of sovereignty and statehood of all nations that asked Russia for assistance," he noted.








The EU is losing relevance in the emerging new world


Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping met in Moscow last week, and Western circles predictably responded by accusing Russia of becoming “subservient” or even a “vassal state” to China.


MEP Guy Verhofstadt, a Euro-fantasist and former prime minister of Belgium, jeered on Twitter, “Putin's appalling legacy now includes turning Russia more and more into a Chinese vassal state,” oblivious to the irony of his own words. As the United States took the lead in denouncing China’s peace plan for the Ukraine conflict, publicly setting out the conditions on which it should end, the European Union was nowhere to be seen, or at least had nothing original to say.


This makes Verhofstadt’s comments a damning display of lacking self-awareness. Russia and China are setting out their vision for a new multipolar world, while the US struggles against them in seeking to maintain its hegemonic position. Meanwhile, the European Union has been reduced to the status of a mere bench player in it all, and has become effectively irrelevant. The failure of EU countries to stake out their own will and position amidst the larger powers, as well as their total subservience to the US, has made a mockery of the “strategic autonomy” concept once championed by Emmanuel Macron.


“Strategic autonomy” is a principle of European integration where the EU should be an actor in a multipolar world, which advocates for its own interests and pursues its own agenda. Supporters of this principle insist that the EU should not blindly follow the will of the US when it comes to every foreign policy issue, but should be proactive and enhance its role on the world stage. Therefore, they should not, as is commonly demanded by Washington, take sides on matters such as a new Cold War with China. The term gained growing traction during the years of the Trump administration, when Europe’s relations with the US hit a low due to his particular interpretation of the “America first” doctrine.


However, the practical reality of “strategic autonomy” is that the EU is not a unitary state, but a loose intergovernmental organization of states which, while seeking to establish common positions on a principle of unity, do not truly have a unified foreign-policy-making mechanism. The intra-institutional politics of the EU are often a messy compromise and battle of wills between different levels of actors, including the states themselves, the European Commission, and the European Parliament. This combines with the reality that “European integration” has been a broken process since 2008. Challenges such as the Eurozone financial crisis, Brexit, Covid-19, and internal conflicts with various states such as Poland have all weakened and fractured the EU.


As a result, the EU has been ill-suited to deal with what is, despite media misdirection, the single most explicit source of foreign influence and interference against it, the US. Washington has multiple channels whereby it exerts control over the EU’s many foreign policy actors. Firstly, it uses a web of government-funded think tanks and associated journalists to control public opinion and steer EU countries towards supporting its objectives. Secondly, the US has an extraordinarily political hold over the former Soviet bloc states to the east of the EU (with the exception of Hungary), which it uses to foment increased antagonism against Russia and China, and therefore undermines the attempts of the bloc’s most “autonomous” and powerful states – Germany and France – to pursue more reconciliatory foreign policies.


Thirdly, the US uses the United Kingdom as its primary cheerleader in Europe (be it from within or without the EU) to project its political will onto the continent and override the will of any defiant member states. An example of this is the BBC World Service acting as a massive propaganda machine to push narratives in line with Washington’s foreign policies. Additionally, the US has shown an ability to work with and weaponize the intelligence services of member states against their own countries, such as using Danish intelligence to spy on other European leaders.


Through all these factors, both past and present, the US has been able to keep Europe divided, conflicted, and seemingly unable to pursue any foreign policy which actually meets European interests, as opposed to those of the US. This has culminated even to the extent of literally destroying the Nord Stream pipelines and then propagating a false narrative that Ukraine was responsible. The Ukraine war has ultimately only accelerated the isolation and irrelevance of Europe, which has strengthened the hold of the military-industrial complex over the continent, undermined its energy industries, and thus converted the term “strategic autonomy” into a laughing stock.


One might ask, who is truly the vassal? If a new multipolar world is emerging, it’s fair to say, Europe simply isn’t part of it. Russia, China, and America are the drivers of current events, the EU is but a passenger.





















Russian Security Council Chief: US 'Champion' In Number of Wars It's Unleashed Around the World

Russian Security Council Chief: US 'Champion' In Number of Wars It's Unleashed Around the World

Russian Security Council Chief: US 'Champion' In Number of Wars It's Unleashed Around the World




©Sputnik/Said Tsarnaev/Go to the mediabank






The US has long been the "champion" in how many wars it has unleashed in different parts of the world and the number of times it has violated the sovereignty of other nations, Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev said on Monday.







"Although proclaiming democratic slogans both opportunistically and inappropriately, Washington has long claimed top place in violating the sovereignty of states, in the number of wars and conflicts it has unleashed, in the brutal and illegal pursuit of citizens of other countries," Patrushev said in an interview ahead of a second 'Summit for Democracy' launched by the United States. Patrushev added that "if the US really decides to move towards democracy and stop humiliating its vassal allies, we will only welcome it."


According to the Russian Security Council chief, corporations in the US have been shaping Washington's foreign policy as they seek to create hotbeds of tension in the world for the sake of billion-dollar profits.


NATO countries have made no secret of their main goal in the Ukraine conflict - that is to defeat Russia on the battlefield and then dismember it, Patrushev asserts.


"In fact, NATO countries are a party to the conflict. They have made one big military camp out of Ukraine. They send Ukrainian troops weapons and ammunition, provide them with intelligence, including with the help of a constellation of satellites and a significant number of drones," Patrushev stressed.


NATO instructors and advisers are training the Ukrainian military, and mercenaries are fighting as part of neo-Nazi battalions, he added.


Washington's confidence that a preventive missile strike on Russia will go unanswered in the event of a direct conflict is "a very dangerous mistake" - Russia has a unique weapon that can destroy any enemy, including the United States, if its existence is threatened, Patrushev warned.


According to the official, the main task of the present US political regime is to scare the people during the systemic crisis into which the United States fell.







"After all, the main task of the political regime in today's United States is to mislead its own population in the systemic crisis in which they find themselves," Patrushev explained.


It is "self-evident" that the United States will not want to hear criticism against itself, Patrushev claims.


He went on to say that China is the main economic competitor of the United States, and after attempts to suppress Russia, the United States will take on China. According to him, Russia irritates the US because "not only does it pursue an independent policy of bolstering the multipolar world, but in many ways surpasses America in spiritual, moral and military spheres.



Russia not going to isolate its economy from world — security chief



Russia will develop economic cooperation with sovereign nations, Secretary of the Security Council Nikolay Patrushev said in an interview with the Rossiyskaya Gazeta newspaper.


"Russia is not going to close its economy from the world. It will remain open and will be integrated with economies of sovereign nations taking care of their prosperity, including owing to cooperation with us," the official said.


"Our country is capable at present not merely to support the internal stability but also the security of our nation from outside threats," Patrushev added.