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Revision as of 04:28, 2 March 2007 editVlad fedorov (talk | contribs)4,845 edits Praise and criticism of the book: This was about Blowing up Russia book, actually. Read the source before writing the article.← Previous edit Revision as of 04:29, 2 March 2007 edit undoVlad fedorov (talk | contribs)4,845 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
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In the book, the authors claim that Russian president ] and other ] officers have been involved in organized crime, including covering up ] from ]. In the book, the authors claim that Russian president ] and other ] officers have been involved in organized crime, including covering up ] from ].


The book was withdrawn from sales in Russia by request from the ] . In response, authors refused from their copyright. The book can be freely printed and reproduced by anyone . By banning the book "for the first time since the Soviet times, FSB threw down a challenge to the society", said ] the executive director of ] . The book was withdrawn from sales in Russia by request from the ] . In response, authors refused from their copyright. The book can be freely printed and reproduced by anyone . By banning the book "for the first time since the Soviet times, FSB threw down a challenge to the society", said ], close friend of ], and the executive director of ] who made a contract for the distribution of that book .





Revision as of 04:29, 2 March 2007

Gang from Lubyanka is a book by Alexander Litvinenko and Alexander Goldfarb about the alleged transformation of the Russian Security Services into a criminal organization.

In the book, the authors claim that Russian president Vladimir Putin and other FSB officers have been involved in organized crime, including covering up drug traffic from Afganistan.

The book was withdrawn from sales in Russia by request from the FSB . In response, authors refused from their copyright. The book can be freely printed and reproduced by anyone . By banning the book "for the first time since the Soviet times, FSB threw down a challenge to the society", said Alexander Goldfarb, close friend of Alexander Litvinenko, and the executive director of International Foundation for Civil Liberties who made a contract for the distribution of that book .


The book

Reviews of the book

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