MOSCOW ? The Russian billionaire challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in March's presidential election said Thursday that he will push for a common currency with the European Union and liberalize the nation's political scene if elected.
Mikhail Prokhorov, who owns 80 percent of the New Jersey Nets basketball team, didn't detail his proposal for a "common global currency based on the euro and the ruble" in the outline of an election platform that he released on his Live Journal blog. But he pledged to push for Russia's integration into a "Big Europe."
The 46-year-old, who made his fortune in metals, banking and media and is estimated to be worth $18 billion, also promised to disband the parliament elected in a fraud-tainted vote earlier this month, and call for a repeat election next December.
That echoed the demand of participants in recent protests in Russia spurred by allegations of ballot-stuffing and other violations in the Dec. 4 election. Prokhorov attended the latest rally over the weekend, which drew up to 100,000 people ? the biggest protest in Russia's post-Soviet history.
His presidential bid follows his botched performance before the parliamentary election, when he formed a liberal political party with the Kremlin's tacit support but abandoned it under what he called Kremlin pressure.
Some observers have speculated that Prokhorov may have had the Kremlin's blessing to join the presidential race in order to cater to voters angry at the government while creating a semblance of genuine competition. Prokhorov has admitted that the Kremlin would like to use him, but insists he will play his own game and try to foster positive change.
Prokhorov also promised to ease controls on Russia's political scene, which has been tightly controlled by Putin, reform a justice system permeated by corruption and abolish the highly unpopular conscription of soldiers into the military, turning it into a fully professional force instead.
He said in his platform that Putin's so-called "sovereign democracy" masks "a contempt for the people, a readiness to sacrifice them for the sake of geopolitical fantasies."
"It's time to understand that the basis for the nation's successful development isn't in tons of coal, barrels of oil and cubic meters of timber, but in a system of human values shared by the society and protected by law," he said.
"I will build my policy based on a Russian humanitarian tradition that for a long time has been present only in Russian literature. It's time to make it part of the political sphere and the public life."
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Nataliya Vasilyeva contributed to this report.
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ADOTAS - Yesterday, the New York Times reported on the patently self-evident fact that people are more inclined to spend money when they?re inebriated. (If you need stats, the article points to a study conducted by British comparison shopping site Kelkoo that says nearly half of respondents in the U.K. admitted to shopping online after drinking.) What?s more illuminating is how retailers might be responding to that. ChannelAdvisor, which provides software that helps retailers sell their goods online, has said its orders peak at 8 p.m. (presumably after happy hour?) and that orders for 9 p.m. to midnight are up this year from 2010; the article lists a number of email promotions from higher-end retailers ? Saks, Gilt Groupe, Neiman Marcus ? that landed in inboxes between 6 p.m. and 2:30 a.m. Now, though anyone who?s ever had three drinks on a payday will probably recognize how effortless (triumphant, even) it feels to order anything online in such a situation, it?s worth pointing out that the hours referenced in the Times story are simply times when people who work nine-to-fivers are at?home, and thus are in a much better position to conduct personal business than they are when they?re at work. Then again, that?s not as much fun as imagining a bunch of drunk people ogling bathmats on an Amazon store late at night.
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