Member of the board of directors of a number of large Russian companies (as of 2010, he is a member of the board of directors of the Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works, the gold mining company Polyus Gold, and Sheremetyevo Airport).
Born on September 21, 1970 in Moscow. In 1992 she graduated from the Moscow Economic and Statistical Institute (MESI). According to Rustamova herself, she graduated from the evening department of MESI, starting to work immediately after school. In 1987-1988 she worked as an economist and operator at the Sokolniki district statistics department of Moscow. In 1988-1991 she worked as a senior economist, specialist of the 1st category of the planning commission of the executive committee of the Soviet District Council of Moscow. In 1992-1995, she headed the individual private enterprise “Zumrud” (Moscow), founded by her father Handadash Gadzhievich Rustamov.
Since 1995, she worked in the State Committee of the Russian Federation for State Property Management. She began working as a 1st category specialist, reaching the level of department head. In 1997-1999 - head of the department of normative and methodological support of the Ministry of State Property of the Russian Federation. The department was developing a regulatory framework for privatization and management of state property, land reform, and regulation of valuation activities.
In 1999-2000 - Deputy Chairman of the Russian Federal Property Fund (RFFI). The position was offered by the then head of the Russian Federal Property Fund Igor Shuvalov.
In 2000-2004 - Deputy Minister of Property Relations of the Russian Federation (head of the ministry - Farit Gazizullin).
In 2004-2006 - Vice President of OJSC Siberian Coal Energy Company (SUEK). According to the Vedomosti newspaper, Rustamova moved to SUEK at the suggestion of the company’s president, Vladimir Rashevsky.
In May 2006, she joined the board of the Russian Development Bank. As the Vedomosti newspaper wrote, Rustamova moved there at the suggestion of their family friend Yuri Isaev (who headed the bank in December 2005). She represented the interests of the state on the boards of directors of a number of companies: Rosgosstrakh, All-Russian Exhibition Center, ALROSA, Rosagroleasing.
Since 2006 - Deputy General Director of JSC Polymetal. In April 2006, at the annual meeting of shareholders of OJSC Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works, she was elected to the company’s board of directors as an independent director.
Since July 2008, she has been a member of the board of directors of Sheremetyevo International Airport OJSC, since April 2009 - a member of the board of directors of Khanty-Mansiysk Bank OJSC, and since September 2009 - a member of the board of directors of Polyus Gold OJSC (leading Russian gold mining company). company).
Married to Russian Presidential Assistant Arkady Dvorkovich. Rustamova and Dvorkovich got married on August 11, 2001, three months after a business trip to Tübingen (Germany), where both were speakers at a conference. They had previously known each other for about a year. The family has two sons: Pavel and Vladimir.
Father - Handadash Gadzhievich Rustamov (born 1947), businessman, grew up in Derbent (Dagestan). In 1992, he founded the individual private enterprise “Zumrud”, the director of which was Zumrud Rustamova, the main activity was hotel activity. In 1994, he founded Gravar LLP, which dealt with hotel and intermediary services.
Mother - Tatyana Abdullovna Rustamova, was previously a shareholder of Sberbank and the joint-stock commercial bank Center.
In 2008, Rustamova’s income amounted to 27.28 million rubles, in 2009 - 27.62 million rubles. (according to the income statement, which family members of officials are required to submit), in 2010 - 41.316 million rubles.
While Dvorkovich is fighting for the title of ass-licker 2011, dancing on his hind legs in front of his boss with the idea of abolishing scholarships for Russian students, his wife Zumrud Rustamova - a former official of the State Property Agency, and now deputy general director of Polymetal (and a member of the board of directors of other companies); extracts money from Russian (including resource-extracting) companies.
"It's good for us to live in Russia !
Russians are such suckers.
You steal from under their noses, and they remain silent and silent."
In 1999, the then head of the Russian Foundation for Basic Research, Igor Shuvalov, invited Rustamova to become his deputy. A year later, she returned to the Ministry of Property as a deputy minister and soon met her future husband. “Arkady [Dvorkovich] was [German Gref’s] deputy minister of economic development. We met for the first time in German Oskarovich’s office,” recalls Rustamova. In the spring of 2001, she and the handsome young deputy minister found themselves at a conference in Germany, and three months later they got married. Rustamova decided to leave the civil service in 2004: after 10 years of bureaucratic career, she wanted to try herself in the real sector, and her family needed money. “By that time, our son was born, and we were still living with my parents,” she recalls. — Arkady and I decided that one of us should leave the service. He had serious prospects, but for me there were no interesting directions in the public sector: the topic of privatization became less relevant. I no longer dreamed of a career as a government official; I wanted qualitative changes.”
In 2005, she gave birth to a second son, and then a friend of their family, Yuri Isaev, offered to go to work at the Russian Development Bank, which he then headed. True, a year later she had to leave the bank with Isaev, and she came to Polymetal. When asked how many people think that her appointments are related to her husband’s position, she shrugs: “It happens, but what can you do about it?” Polymetal is not the largest company in Russia, she notes, there are no problems there that need to be solved with the help of her husband or his colleagues. According to Rustamova, outsiders often come to her with different requests: someone was deceived about an apartment, someone about business, and someone has encountered serious bureaucratic obstacles and cannot get a solution. “And if I understand that I have to help, then I can turn not only to my husband,” she says. - If I see that a person is pursuing personal, selfish interests, then I refuse. Why work on your reputation for so many years and then put an end to it?” She doesn’t miss civil service: “We have two children. Today, work allows me to spend the whole weekend with them, but at the ministry I had half a day a week for my family.” Although work requires a lot of time, Rustamova still prefers to work and “a little” regret that she doesn’t spend enough time with her children, rather than vice versa.
When asked whether his brother Mikhail would be in the position he occupies if not for the high position of Arkady Dvorkovich himself, Arkady Vladimirovich Dvorkovich replied that he considers his brother a very energetic and talented person...
18+ Incriminating evidence on Arkady Dvorkovich and his wife Zumrud Rustamova.
Dvorkovich's wife became the leader in income for 2015 among the wives of senior officials.
The lowest income among the wives of government officials is the wife of the head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Vladimir Kolokoltsev.
In the government, Dvorkovich's wife became the richest among all wives. The amount of income she declared for 2015 amounted to 141 million 903 thousand rubles. In second place is the wife of Deputy Prime Minister - Head of the Government Staff Sergei Prikhodko. Her income in 2015 amounted to 132 million 609 thousand rubles. The wife of First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov closes the top three with income of 92 million 463 thousand rubles. The life partners of government officials turned out to be much richer than those of the Kremlin.
Among the wives of high-ranking officials of the Presidential Administration, the wife of the press secretary of the head of state, Dmitry Peskov, Tatyana Navka, received the greatest income last year. The famous figure skater earned 89 million rubles. In second place is the wife of the presidential assistant - head of the Kremlin Control Directorate, Konstantin Chuychenko. Her income amounted to 23.5 million rubles. In third place is the wife of the head of the Presidential Administration for the Application of Information Technologies and the Development of Electronic Democracy, Andrei Lipov, with an income of 14 million 162 thousand rubles.
The lowest income among the wives of government officials is that of the wife of the head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Vladimir Kolokoltsev: 81 thousand rubles. Following her is the wife of the Minister of Natural Resources Sergei Donskoy - 181 thousand rubles. In third place is the wife of the richest government minister, Mikhail Abyzov. For 2015, her declared income amounted to 678 thousand rubles
The wife of the Prime Minister, Svetlana Medvedeva, and the wife of the Minister for the Development of the Far East, Alexander Galushka, did not receive any income in 2015.
Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Arkady Dvorkovich earned 6 million 962 thousand 754 rubles in 2015, while his wife earned 141 million 390 thousand 378 rubles. This information on income is presented on the website of the Russian government.
Let us recall that in 2014 the gap in their income was smaller - then Dvorkovich earned 5 million 703 thousand 340 rubles, and his wife - 49 million 809 thousand 190 rubles, respectively.
Dvorkovich owns a plot of land, a residential building, an apartment and a garage, as well as a GAZ car.
The wife owns two plots of land, two apartments and another apartment in shared ownership, as well as two Lexus cars.
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Today, Dvorkovich's star shines brighter than ever: he is the government's deputy prime minister, responsible for a number of strategic industries. And, as “Ko” notes, his area of responsibility clearly intersects with the business interests of his friends. Experts say that the person closest to Dvorkovich is his classmate at Moscow State University, Ziyavudin Magomedov, owner of the Summa group. This group recently acquired the privatized United Grain Company (UZK) for 6 billion rubles (50% minus 1 share). However, “Ko” notes, the competition was not transparent, so the state, quite likely, could have received a much larger amount for the OZK.
The Summa group has worked with state contractors more than once, and very often with the “light hand” of Dvorkovich. In 2008, when Dvorkovich was on the board of Transneft, Summa’s subsidiary received contracts for the landmark project of the Eastern Siberia – Pacific Ocean (ESPO) pipeline. In 2009, Summa gained control of SUIproekt, the general contractor for the reconstruction of the Bolshoi Theater. Dvorkovich was in the presidential administration at that time. As a result, a project worth more than 21.6 billion rubles. ended up under the control of “Summa”,” notes “Ko”. The group's total assets are now estimated at approximately $5 billion.
Vitaly Yusufov is considered another “close” businessman. “Here it would be appropriate to recall the transaction for VTB to purchase shares of the Bank of Moscow,” writes the weekly. - VTB did not risk buying the securities directly, but attracted Suleiman Kerimov (3.38%) and Igor Yusufov’s son Vitaly (19.31%), who used borrowed funds. According to some estimates, Vitaly Yusufov could earn 5 billion rubles from the resale of shares. (about $170 million).” However, his other project is of greater importance for Yusufov - the 4G networks of the Osnova Telecom company. In June 2010, the Osnova company was registered, created by Voentelecom of the Ministry of Defense (25.1%) and Ikominvest (74.9%) for the construction of networks at frequencies claimed by the Big Three. “Vitaly Yusufov’s fortune is currently estimated at $700 million, but the potential of Osnova Telecom is quite large,” assure the Company’s experts.
In addition, Akhmed Bilalov and Mikhail Abyzov are also said to be close to the new prime minister and deputy prime minister. At least, both made their fortune during Medvedev’s presidency. Abyzov’s company, created on the basis of the assets of the former RAO UES, is today one of the largest infrastructure companies, and Abyzov received a ministerial portfolio in Medvedev’s cabinet. The official's fortune today is estimated at $1.3 billion. Akhmed Bilalov met Dmitry Medvedev back in 2006, when the future president headed the government commission on religious associations. Since then, his career has only gone up. Now Bilalov is trying to make a European-level resort out of the North Caucasus. What was the budget money for? The project costs almost $15 billion, of which $2 billion will be invested by the state. “The funds allocated to the region go, among other things, through people close to Dmitry Medvedev,” notes Ko.
However, the most prominent among the president’s entourage is another entrepreneur – Suleiman Kerimov. A man who lost everything in the 2008 crisis is again worth more than $6.5 billion by the end of 2011. Kerimov’s largest project was the purchase of Uralkali and its merger with Silvinit. “Both Russian producers of potassium chloride are valued at $24 billion, and their annual revenue exceeds $2 billion. It is clear that without the approval of the Kremlin, such transactions would be simply impossible,” the publication notes. In addition, he received the development company PIK practically for nothing. Kerimov received 25% from the owners on the promise to settle debts worth 14.2 billion rubles. Sberbank agreed to provide a loan. After settling the debt with creditors, Kerimov received another 20% of PIK.
Quite expectedly, given Dvorkovich’s activities, the former head of Kalmykia, Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, was among the prime minister’s entrepreneurs. After his resignation in 2010, he began investing in foreign assets: he entered into telecommunications projects in Southeast Asian countries. Ilyumzhinov recently acquired 50% of the telecommunications company Vip, operating in Poland and Ukraine, bought 52.5% of the largest Bulgarian fuel supplier Petrol Holding and a stake in Sukden, the Russian subsidiary of the world's largest sugar trader Groupe Sucres & Denrees. Also, together with the largest British fund Ashmore Group, Ilyumzhinov created a private equity fund with a starting capital of $1 billion.
The connection with Dvorkovich is not accidental: chess professionals remember how, with a swift move, the presidential aide saved Ilyumzhinov’s position as head of FIDE, the international chess association, in 2010. The chair that almost went to world champion Anatoly Karpov. Why is this place so important? “FIDE gives business legitimization,” explains Ko’s interlocutor, “it is the largest federation after FIFA. It includes more than 200 countries, and the presidency gives the opportunity to move freely around the world and negotiate not only about chess.” FIDE actively supports the tournament named after Vladimir Dvorkovich (the official's father, a famous grandmaster), as does the already mentioned Ziyavudin Magomedov. On his official website it is indicated that the owner of Summa has invested no less than several tens of millions of rubles in chess.
The ex-owner of RussNeft, Mikhail Gutseriev, also appeared in the cohort of “praetorians”. “Ko” reminds that a criminal case was opened against him for tax evasion. But the businessman was given the opportunity to hide abroad. He lived in London for several years. “Everything changed in 2010,” writes the Company. - They say that German Gref and the owner of AFK Sistema Vladimir Yevtushenkov, known for his good relations with Dmitry Medvedev, put in a good word for the disgraced entrepreneur. In January 2010, Gutseriev returned to the board of directors of RussNeft, and in the spring of the same year he came to Russia.” And so - at the end of last year, Gutseriev’s fortune was again estimated at $6.7 billion. And his nephew Mikhail Shishkhanov, who bought 430 hectares of land and a construction project of about 5 million square meters in 2007. m of real estate in “New Riga”, agreed on the help of Sberbank.
Company experts estimate the total assets of a group of close businessmen at $50 billion. However, the publication notes, in the second stage of privatization, which Arkady Dvorkovich is constantly lobbying for, significantly larger volumes of budget funds will pass through this financial group. The magazine summarizes: “Today we can say that Dmitry Medvedev has created a “personal” pool of businessmen. These include Ziyavudin Magomedov, Suleiman Kerimov, Akhmed Bilalov, Mikhail Abyzov and Igor Yusufov. The growth of their assets occurred during the presidential term of the current prime minister, and now they are trying to maintain their influence and property.”
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In 2010, Anatoly Karpov made a statement in an open letter that, in his opinion, Dvorkovich carried out a raider takeover of the Russian Chess Federation. He explained that the Supervisory Board of the Russian Chess Federation in May 2010 decided to nominate Karpov for the post of President of the Russian Chess Federation. It turns out that Dvorkovich opposed this decision. Arkady Vladimirovich himself explained this by saying that such a decision was made without his participation, so he considered it illegal.
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Material from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia
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[[Lua error in Module:Wikidata/Interproject on line 17: attempt to index field "wikibase" (a nil value). |Works]] in Wikisource |
Zumrud Handadashevna Rustamova(September 21, Moscow) - Deputy General Director of the Russian mining company Polymetal. Former Deputy Minister of Property Relations of the Russian Federation (2000-2004).
Member of the board of directors of a number of large Russian companies (as of 2010, she was on the board of the Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works, the gold mining company Polyus Gold, and Sheremetyevo Airport).
Born on September 21, 1970 in Moscow. In 1992 she graduated from MESI. According to Rustamova herself, she graduated from the evening department of MESI, starting to work immediately after school. In 1987-1988 she worked as an economist and operator at the Sokolniki district statistics department of Moscow. In 1988-1991 she worked as a senior economist, specialist of the 1st category of the planning commission of the executive committee of the Soviet District Council of Moscow. In 1992-1995, she headed the individual private enterprise “Zumrud” (Moscow), founded by her father Handadash Gadzhievich Rustamov.
In 1999-2000 - Deputy Chairman of the Russian Federal Property Fund (RFFI). The position was offered by the then head of the Russian Federal Property Fund Igor Shuvalov.
Acting State Advisor of the Russian Federation, 2nd class.
In 2004-2006 - Vice President of OJSC Siberian Coal Energy Company (SUEK). According to the Vedomosti newspaper, Rustamova moved to SUEK at the suggestion of the company’s president, Vladimir Rashevsky.
In May 2006, she joined the board of the Russian Development Bank. As the Vedomosti newspaper wrote, Rustamova moved there at the suggestion of their family friend Yuri Isaev (who headed the bank in December 2005). She represented the interests of the state on the boards of directors of a number of companies: Rosgosstrakh, All-Russian Exhibition Center, ALROSA, Rosagroleasing.
Since 2006, he has been the head of the Cyprus representative office of the investment holding Nafta Moscow by Suleiman Kerimova, as well as deputy general director of Polymetal OJSC. In April 2006, at the annual meeting of shareholders of OJSC Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works, she was elected to the company’s board of directors as an independent director.
Since July 2008, she joined the board of directors of Sheremetyevo International Airport OJSC (resigned in 2013), from April 2009 - on the board of directors of Khanty-Mansiysk Bank OJSC, from September 2009 - on the board of directors of OJSC Polyus Gold (leading Russian gold mining company).
On June 21, 2011, she joined the board of directors of OJSC PIK Group of Companies.
Married to Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Arkady Dvorkovich. Rustamova and Dvorkovich married in 2001, three months after a business trip to Tübingen (Germany), where both were speakers at a conference. They had previously known each other for about a year. The family has three sons: Pavel, Vladimir and Denis.
Father - Handadash Gadzhievich Rustamov (born 1947), businessman, grew up in Derbent (Dagestan). In 1992, he founded the individual private enterprise “Zumrud”, the director of which was Zumrud Rustamova, the main activity was hotel activity. In 1994, he founded Gravar LLP, which was engaged in hotel and intermediary services.
Mother - Tatyana Abdullovna Rustamova, was previously a shareholder of Sberbank and the joint-stock commercial bank Center.
In 2008, Rustamova’s income amounted to 27.28 million rubles. , in 2009 - 27.62 million rubles. , in 2010 - 41.316 million rubles. , in 2014 - 49.8 million rubles (according to the income statement, which family members of officials are required to submit).
We were again greeted by the same gloomy, ominous landscape, which I almost didn’t pay attention to, since it, like everything else, after so many trips to the Lower Astral, had become almost familiar to us, as far as one could get used to such a thing in general. ..
We quickly looked around and immediately saw Maria...
The baby, hunched over, sat straight on the ground, completely drooping, not seeing or hearing anything around, and only affectionately stroked the shaggy, motionless body of the “departed” friend with her frozen palm, as if trying to wake him up... Severe and bitter, completely not childish tears flowed in rivulets from her sad, extinct eyes, and, flashing with brilliant sparks, disappeared into the dry grass, watering it for a moment with clean, living rain... It seemed that this whole already quite cruel world had now become even more cruel for Maria colder and even stranger... She was left completely alone, so amazingly fragile in her deep sadness, and there was no one else to console her, or caress her, or even just protect her in a friendly way... And next to her, a huge , her best friend, her faithful Dean, lay motionless as a mound... She clung to his soft, shaggy back, unconsciously refusing to acknowledge his death. And she stubbornly did not want to leave him, as if knowing that even now, after death, he still loved her just as faithfully and also sincerely protected her... She really missed his warmth, his strong “furry” support, and that familiar, reliable, “their little world”, in which only the two of them lived... But Dean was silent, stubbornly not wanting to wake up... And some small, toothy creatures were scurrying around him, trying to grab at least a small piece of him hairy “flesh”... At the beginning, Maria still tried to drive them away with a stick, but, seeing that the attackers were not paying any attention to her, she gave up on everything... Here, just like on the “solid” Earth, there existed “ the law of the strong,” but when this strong one died, those who could not get him alive, now with pleasure tried to make up for lost time by “tasting” his energy body, at least dead...
From this sad picture my heart ached sharply and there was a treacherous pinch in my eyes... I suddenly felt wildly sorry for this wonderful, brave girl... And I couldn’t even imagine how she, poor thing, could, completely alone, in this terrible, sinister world, stand up for yourself?!
Stella’s eyes also suddenly sparkled wetly – apparently, similar thoughts came to her.
- Forgive me, Maria, how did your Dean die? – I finally decided to ask.
The little girl raised her tear-stained face at us, in my opinion, not even understanding what they were asking her about. She was very far away... Perhaps where her faithful friend was still alive, where she was not so lonely, where everything was clear and good... And the baby did not want to return here. Today's world was evil and dangerous, and she had no one else to rely on, and there was no one to protect her... Finally, taking a deep breath and heroically gathering her emotions into a fist, Maria told us the sad story of Dina's death...
– I was with my mother, and my kind Dean, as always, was guarding us... And then suddenly a terrible man appeared from somewhere. He was very bad. I wanted to run away from him wherever I could, but I just couldn’t understand why... He was just like us, even handsome, just very unpleasant. It smelled of horror and death. And he laughed all the time. And this laughter made my blood run cold... He wanted to take my mother with him, said that she would serve him... And my mother struggled, but he, of course, was much stronger... And then Dean tried to protect us, which he always managed to do before. Only the man was probably something special... He threw a strange orange “flame” at Dean, which could not be extinguished... And when, even while he was burning, Dean tried to protect us, the man killed him with blue lightning, which suddenly “blazed” from his hand. That's how my Dean died... And now I'm alone.
Born on September 21, 1970 in Moscow. In 1992 she graduated from the Moscow Economic and Statistical Institute (MESI). According to Rustamova herself, she graduated from the evening department of MESI, starting to work immediately after school. In 1987-1988 she worked as an economist and operator at the Sokolniki district statistics department of Moscow. In 1988-1991 she worked as a senior economist, specialist of the 1st category of the planning commission of the executive committee of the Soviet District Council of Moscow. In 1992-1995, she headed the individual private enterprise “Zumrud” (Moscow), founded by her father Handadash Gadzhievich Rustamov.
Civil service Since 1995, she worked in the State Committee of the Russian Federation for State Property Management. She began working as a 1st category specialist, reaching the level of department head. In 1997-1999 - head of the department of normative and methodological support of the Ministry of State Property of the Russian Federation. The department was developing a regulatory framework for privatization and management of state property, land reform, regulation of valuation activities
In 1999-2000 - Deputy Chairman of the Russian Federal Property Fund (RFFI). The position was offered by the then head of the Russian Foundation for Basic Research Igor Shuvalov
In 2000-2004 - Deputy Minister of Property Relations of the Russian Federation (head of the ministry - Farit Gazizullin)
In 2001, she married Arkady Dvorkovich (at that time he was Deputy Minister of Economic Development in the department of German Gref)
In business In 2004-2006 - Vice President of OJSC Siberian Coal Energy Company (SUEK). According to the Vedomosti newspaper, Rustamova moved to SUEK at the suggestion of the company’s president Vladimir Rashevsky
In May 2006, she joined the board of the Russian Development Bank. As the Vedomosti newspaper wrote, Rustamova moved there at the suggestion of their family friend Yuri Isaev (who headed the bank in December 2005). Represented the interests of the state on the boards of directors of a number of companies: Rosgosstrakh, All-Russian Exhibition Center, ALROSA, Rosagroleasing
Since 2006 - Deputy General Director of JSC Polymetal. In April 2006, at the annual meeting of shareholders of OJSC Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works, she was elected to the company’s board of directors as an independent director.
Since July 2008, she has been a member of the board of directors of Sheremetyevo International Airport OJSC, since April 2009 - a member of the board of directors of Khanty-Mansiysk Bank OJSC, and since September 2009 - a member of the board of directors of Polyus Gold OJSC (leading Russian gold mining company). company)
Family Married to Deputy Chairman of the Russian Government Arkady Dvorkovich. Rustamova and Dvorkovich got married on August 11, 2000, three months after a business trip to Tübingen (Germany), where both were speakers at a conference. They had previously known each other for about a year. The family has two sons: Pavel and Vladimir
Father - Handadash Gadzhievich Rustamov (born 1947), businessman, grew up in Derbent (Dagestan). In 1992, he founded the individual private enterprise “Zumrud”, the director of which was Zumrud Rustamova, the main activity was hotel activity. In 1994 he founded Gravar LLP, which was engaged in hotel and intermediary services
Mother - Tatyana Abdullovna Rustamova, was previously a shareholder of Sberbank and the joint-stock commercial bank Center.
Galya
2013-06-14 22:24:58
what terrible women our statesmen have. for the money they steal you can make dolls or nothing can be done about such physicality [Answer] [Reply with quote][Cancel reply] |
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