out so admirably. julia, he takes this over control at a particularly difficult time for the united kingdom, not to mention independence movements, but the economy, what is staring in the face of every britain right now and that is soaring energy prices, soaring inflation, a real question of just being able to make it day to day for so many. how do you expect that he will address that, not given a political role, that s not one he has, but still as the new monarch? sympathy. it s a delicate moment in many respects, as you said, for the uk economy it was already expected to head into next year with the worst growth and the highest inflation rate of any nation in the g7 and actually in the very short term the queen s loss and the mourning period actually complicates that. we had data this morning that showed that the day off that
Russia is entering a period of political turmoil that is likely to include renewed demands for independence by its constituent republics in a replay of the break-up of the Soviet Union.
the washington post. and that time i would go to ukraine, and by 1989 i was able to meet with people who are independent activists. and it was a very small number, they were very brave, they all had been sent to prison at one time or another during the soviet period. and these were meetings in 1989, 1990, and they were looking at what was happening in the baltic states, is tony a, lot trio, luke wayne era. and they were really independence movements that were active there. by 1990, the group called the roof had developed and they were the independent movements grew and grew. what collapse the soviet union? many factors, principally economic, a technological, social. but in 1991, the ukrainian people were given a referendum, whether they wanted to be independent or not. over 90% of ukrainians, not just people in the west and in lviv, or intellectuals in kyiv, but all over the country including the east, which
and they were really independence movements that were active there. by 1990, the group called the roof had developed and they were the independent movements grew and grew. what collapse the soviet union? many factors, principally economic, a technological, social. but in 1991, the ukrainian people were given a referendum, whether they wanted to be independent or not. over 90% of ukrainians, not just people in the west and in lviv, or intellectuals in kyiv, but all over the country including the east, which russia now claims for its help voted for independence. and weeks later, that was the final straw. weeks later the soviet union collapsed. it was over. an empire was over. and what putin yearns for is not the return of communist ideology, in fact he s been critical of london.
to meet with people who are independent activists. and it was a very small number, they were very brave, they all had been sent to prison at one time or another during the soviet period. and these were meetings in 1989, 1990, and they were looking at what was happening in the baltic states, is tony a, lot trio, luke wayne era. and they were really independence movements that were active there. by 1990, the group called the roof had developed and they were the independent movements grew and grew. what collapse the soviet union? many factors, principally economic, a technological, social. but in 1991, the ukrainian people were given a referendum, whether they wanted to be independent or not. over 90% of ukrainians, not just people in the west and in lviv, or intellectuals in kyiv, but all over the country including the east, which russia now claims for its help