President Boris Yeltsin announced on national television Friday that he had resigned and presidential elections will be held within 90 days to replace him.
Published:
31 December 1999 y., Friday
The announcement caught Russia by surprise, and is likely to launch the country into yet another political crisis as parties scramble for unexpected presidential elections. Looking pale and grim in a speech on national television, Yeltsin said he had turned over his powers to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, his preference to succeed him as president.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Russia and other CIS countries have said that the Organization for Cooperation and Security in Europe needs to be reformed to avoid "double standards" in its work
more »
In Moscow for a one-day visit to boost German-Russian business ties, German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder praised Russian President Vladimir Putin's economic reform course
more »
Home affairs ministers from the big five EU countries - the UK, France, Spain, Italy and Germany - are meeting today near Sheffield in Northern England to discuss anti-terror measures
more »
The most significant military parade, sporting demonstration and civil machinery show took place in the Belarusian capital on the occasion of the Independence Day and the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Belarus from the Nazis
more »
David Blunkett hopes the informal meeting will aid cooperation
more »
A court in Qatar sentenced two Russians to life imprisonment for killing a Chechen rebel leader in the Gulf state and said the Russian leadership was behind the assassination
more »
Sarmīte "Sam" Bulte, a Latvian-Canadian member of parliament from the Parkdale-High Park riding of Toronto, has been reelected on the Liberal Party ticket
more »
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has denied media reports that Russian Ambassador to Ashgabat Andrei Molochkov had been recalled
more »
If President Vladimir Putin intended to send a message to the business community Thursday, he let events speak for themselves
more »
NATO's military activity in the Baltic region worries Moscow
more »