Alexander Petrov
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 35 |
Date of birth | January 25,1989 |
Zodiac sign | Aquarius |
Born | Pereslavl-Zalessky |
Russia | |
Height | 175 (cm) |
Parents | Alevtina Petrova |
Andrey Petrov | |
Siblings | Yekaterina Petrova |
Job | Voice acting |
Education | Russian Institute of Theatre Arts - GITIS |
University of Pereslavl | |
Awards | Academy Award for Best Short Film (Animated) |
Nika Award for Best Animated Feature Film | |
Golden Eagle Award for Best Actor in a TV Series | |
Golden Eagle Award for Best Leading Actor | |
Nominations | Golden Eagle Award for Best Actor in a TV Series |
Golden Eagle Award for Best Leading Actor | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 473210 |
The Policeman of Rublyovka
Policeman from Rublevka. New Year's mayhem
Fartsa
Obnimaya Nebo
Eclipse
The Method
Elusive: The Last Hero
You're All Driving Me Crazy
Privychka rasstavatsya
Love in the Big City 3
Gogol. Terrible Revenge
Sheep & Wolves
Until flowering Fern
Yolki 3
Fort Ross
Partner
Attraction 2
Happiness is
Gogol. Viy
Mata Hari
Excavation
August Eighth
The Day Before
Petrovich
Sparta
T 34
Gogol. The Beginning
Attraction
Ice
Text
T‑34
Nadvoye
Alexander Petrov Life story
Alexander Andreevich Petrov is a Russian actor, known for his roles in Attraction and Gogol. The Beginning.
Salisbury Novichok attack poisoned second officer, Met confirms
... A UK investigation blamed Russian agents for the Novichok attack, identifying two suspects using the names Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov...
Skripal case: US to impose new sanctions against Russia fails
... The investigation also identified two suspects by the name of Alexander Petrov, and Ruslan Boshirov - both denied any involvement...
Charlie Rowley: Novichok victim 'wants to meet Vladimir Putin'
... In September, Scotland Yard and the Crown Prosecution Service said there was sufficient evidence to charge two Russians - known as Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov - with offences including conspiracy to murder...
Salisbury poisoning: EU sanctions Russian suspects
... Alexander Petrov (on the left) and Ruslan Boshirov have been unmasked as an agent of the Russian secret service - The European Union has poisoning sanctions against senior staff members of the Russian military intelligence service, the GRU, on the Salisbury...
Salisbury poisoning: EU sanctions Russian suspects
"Alexander Petrov " (left) and "Ruslan Boshirov" were unmasked as agents for Russian intelligence
The European Union has put sanctions on senior officials from the Russian Military Intelligence agency, the GRU, over the Salisbury poisonings.
Four people have been sanctioned - including The Head of the GRU, deputy head, and two agents who are believed to have carried out The Attack .
The Novichok nerve agent they used severely poisoned three people and killed a fourth, Dawn Sturgess.
The sanctions put a ban on travel to the EU and freezes any assets there.
They also prevent any person or company in the EU from providing any financial support to those affected.
This is the First Time the EU has used its new powers to sanction those connected to chemical weapons manufacture and use, which it created in October last year.
All four GRU staff remain in Russia, which will not extradite them to face charges.
In a statement, the EU said:
The Intended target of The Attack , Sergei Skripal , survived despite being severely poisoned, as did his daughter Yulia. Their whereabouts are kept secret.
But months after the initial poisoning, a resident of nearby Amesbury, Dawn Sturgess, died of Novichok poisoning. Her partner, Charlie Rowley, had found a bottle in a perfume box and had given it to her.
It contained the nerve agent, apparently discarded after The Attack on the Skripals. Mr Rowley was also poisoned, but survived.
The sanctioning of the two agents comes after months of insistence from Moscow that there is no evidence to show their guilt.
In The Aftermath of the poisoning, UK police released The Names and photographs of Mr Chepiga and Mr Mishkin, who had used the pseudonyms Ruslan Boshirov and Alexander Petrov , having traced their steps meticulously through CCTV footage.
Despite The Presence of the two Russian intelligence agents in Salisbury at the time and the use of a nerve agent believed to have been made in Russia, Moscow insisted The Men were innocent.
In an interview on state-run television channel RT, the pair said they were merely tourists, denied having travelled under fake names, and said they had made The Journey to see The City 's cathedral. The appearance was widely ridiculed and the story labelled implausible.
Their identities, at least, are now widely agreed upon:
After the EU announced its sanctions, Russia's foreign ministry threatened retaliation "against this unfriendly action".
It said the sanctions were adopted under the "pretext" that the pair were involved in the Salisbury attack, but maintained that the accusations against them "do not stand up to scrutiny".
"The Information campaign unleashed by The British authorities on this case pursues, first of all, domestic political goals," it said, highlighting the current "crisis" over Brexit.
It also accused the EU of circumventing the United Nations Security Council and taking unilateral action.
Alongside the Russian GRU agents, five people from a Syrian institute widely held responsible for damaging chemical weapons, the Scientific Studies and Research Centre, were also hit with the same sanctions.
russia, chemical weapons, russian spy poisoning, amesbury novichok poisoning, suspected syria chemical attack, european union, salisbury
Source of news: bbc.com