Friday, August 10, 2007
A third man has died today from injuries sustained in the crash of an Royal Air Force Aérospatiale Puma helicopter in the county of North Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, earlier this week. Twelve people were on board the aircraft when it crashed near Catterick Garrison army base on Wednesday evening during what is said to have been a routine training exercise.
The man has not been named but is understood to be a soldier from the Infantry Training Battalion at Catterick. Brigadier David Clements of the Commandant Infantry Training Centre said “We are all deeply saddened by the news that one of the recruits involved in Wednesday’s helicopter accident has died as a result of the injuries he sustained. His family were with him when he passed away. Our thoughts and prayers are with them at this most difficult time.”
Flight Lieutenant David Sale, aged 28, and Sergeant Phillip Burfoot, aged 27, died at the scene of the crash.
This article has been assessed not ready for publication.Please see the review comments on the collaboration page. When these things have been done, and the article is ready to be reviewed and fact-checked, Submit for review?Template:Assistant:Submit/formMikhail Gruznov: We do not understand what is happening on WikipediaSubmit for review by changing the |
This article has been assessed not ready for publication.
Please see the review comments on the collaboration page. When these things have been done, and the article is ready to be reviewed and fact-checked, Submit for review?Template:Assistant:Submit/formMikhail Gruznov: We do not understand what is happening on WikipediaSubmit for review by changing the |
This is a complete or partial translation of the article “?????? ???????: ?? ?? ????????, ??? ?????????? ? ?????????“, from the ??????? language Wikinews, published under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License. |
This is a complete or partial translation of the article “?????? ???????: ?? ?? ????????, ??? ?????????? ? ?????????“, from the ??????? language Wikinews, published under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License. |
Friday, August 2, 2019
Russian Wikinews talked to Mikhail Gruznov, a Russian wikipedian who nearly 14 years has worked in the project; he used to work as administrator, pioneered the Wikipedia lawful paid-contribution, and has made the paid editing his profession.
Mikhail caused a political scandal that could affect the presence of Wikipedia in Russia. According to online newspaper Meduza, on July 2 he initiated the blocking of a group of 12 users he identified, who introduced edits to the encyclopedia in the interests of the Kremlin. In addition, a month later, four media related to Yevgeny Prigozhin were included in the spam-blacklist, as reported by newspaper Kommersant on August 5. This also happened due to Gruznov, and Mikhail’s actions led to attacks on him and Wikipedia in the Russian media. Online information agency URA.Ru accused Gruznov of creating fake articles about Russia. Wikipedia was called the “propaganda tool from the USA”. According to online newspaper Novye Izvestia, on August 6 the head of the Russian Union of Journalists Vladimir Solovyov proposed to create a national analogue of Wikipedia.
Dmitry Rozhkov, an experienced Russian wikipedian, interviewed Mikhail on behalf of Russian Wikinews. We present the interview here in translation from the Russian-language original.
Contents
- 1 About the ‘group of twelve’
- 2 About deputies and Dissernet
- 3 About monitoring of Wikipedia
- 4 About lack of resources
- 5 About paid editing
- 6 About sponsors and philanthropists
- 7 Sources
((Dmitry Rozhkov)) Hello, Mikhail. ((ru))Russian language: ???????????, ??????.
Mikhail Gruznov: Hi. ((ru))Russian language: ???????.