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Search resuls for: "Eduard Korniyenko"


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A job seeker walks past a sign of the Headhunter recruitment site at a local job fair in the southern city of Stavropol, Russia October 25, 2017. REUTERS/Eduard Korniyenko/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsMOSCOW, Nov 1 (Reuters) - Russian recruiting agency Headhunter said it had offered holders of its ordinary shares and American Depositary Shares (ADSs) held outside Russia's depository infrastructure the chance to sell back their holdings or exchange them for newly issued shares. Headhunter was previously listed on the U.S. Nasdaq exchange, but its shares were suspended soon after Moscow despatched troops to Ukraine in February 2022, and subsequently delisted. Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Kevin LiffeyOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Eduard Korniyenko, Headhunter, Kevin Liffey Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, U.S, Nasdaq, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Stavropol, Russia, Moscow, Ukraine
Russian schools are adding a basic military training course to their curricula, per TASS. The course is a Soviet-era practice that teaches students first aid and how to use rifles. Mironov and deputy defense minister Valery Gerasimov have vocally supported reinstating military training in schools, with Gerasimov suggesting that students in the 10th and 11th grades be given 140 hours of training, per Izvestia. When we were engaged in military training at school, it worked only as a plus," said Adalbi Shkhagoshev, the deputy chairman of the United Russia party, per the outlet. The basic military training program was retired in 1993, two years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, per independent Russian news outlet The Moscow Times.
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