Sergei Dubov

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Sergei Dubov
Born Sergei Leonidovich Dubov
(1943-02-04)4 February 1943
Moscow, USSR
Died 1 May 1994(1994-05-01) (aged 51)
Moscow, Russia

Sergei Dubov (Russian: Серге́й Леонидович Дубов; 4 February 1943 – 1 February 1994) was a Russian journalist, publisher and entrepreneur. The Independent called him a "brilliant businessman".[1]

Biography

Dubov fraduated from the Moscow Poligraphical Institute (now the Moscow State University of Printing Arts) editorial department. He worked on TV and then forthe newspaper Book Review. He became chairman of the "New Times" publishing house, which published Vsyo Dlya Vas, Novoye Vremya, and International and Moscow Business Week.

Notable facts

  • He refused to join the Communist Party.[citation needed]
  • He was the first person who published Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's collected works (in seven volumes) in Russia.[citation needed]
  • He was the first publisher in Russian of Viktor Suvorov's books Icebreaker,[2] Aquarium, Day-M and others.

Death

He was murdered on 1 February 1994. The assassin waited in a phone booth, and when Dubov was goingto his car in the morning shot him in the back of the head. Earlier, Dubov had received threats by telephone and by mail.[1] There was a team of investigators from the Ministry of Interior, and the MUR (abbreviation for The Moscow Investigation Department) District police station established to investigate the murder. President Boris Yeltsin closely monitored the case. However, it has never been resolved.

Dubov's son, Sergei Dubov Jr, aged 15, was killed the year before by being thrown from a 14th floor window.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Obituary: Sergei Dubov
  2. Tale of the Great Victory and about Comrade Stalin, a protege of world Jewry.

External links

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