world. i m fareed zakaria. today on the program from the czars and arenas to soviet-era com czars to president putin. we delve into the nature of power in russia looking at the past to help us understand the present. i ll talk to the new yorkers david remnick can professor nina krus efa. also the prime minister of barbados on getting the west to pay for damage for the climate change s rising seas and weather. two degrees is a death sentence. and the president of kenya on why many nations in the global south are not taking a side on the war in ukraine. but first, here s my take. in his important book the third wave samuel huntington pointed out the division among the ruling elite is a key sign of weakness in authoritarian regimes. when prominent members of the establishment break with the system it often triggers a larger set of changes. conversely, when you do not see such defections it means the autocrat will probably be able to survive. syrian dictator bashar al ass
Residents say that prices have appreciated in the last one year, and the builder should provide a buyback offer per the market rate. At present, residents do not have a rehabilitation offer on hand as both the offers for reconstruction and buyback have been withdrawn by the builder.
The iconic medieval tower in the Italian city of Bologna is at the verge of collapse. The Garisenda Tower, one of the ‘two towers’ that dominate the skyline of Bologna, is at a highly critical stage. The city of Bologna is under high alert as the tower is close to fall
contr control-driven, but most of it is outside russia. so in this sense, the choice, of course, would be for putin and i was walking around moscow especially on saturday during the mutiny and people were saying quite openly whatever we think of putin i still want my child to go to school and i don t want him to be a soldier and he consolidated putd in, has not lost his grip on power, at least not in the near-term. of course, we know from russian history things can change at any moment and david was a great witness to this, and i remember he left the soviet union and then had to come back to witness 1991. david, it is a very different scenario, but describe to us what you think were the key what was the key thing that happened to make that soviet edifice of power collapse when you look at it now?