Revision as of 16:05, 1 November 2006 editWilliam Mauco (talk | contribs)4,907 edits ...then delete it all, if you don't want to show the facts of the Smirnov-Sheriff fight (which is fully sourced, by the way)← Previous edit | Revision as of 16:08, 1 November 2006 edit undoMariusM (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users4,058 edits This article is about Sheriff. Ties between Sheriff and Renewal are relevant. Detailed explanations about Renewal political strategies not relevantNext edit → | ||
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The name came from the two founders of the company, the ]-Transnistrian CEO and president Viktor Gushan and ]-Transnistrian Ilya Kazmaly, who were previously ] officers. | The name came from the two founders of the company, the ]-Transnistrian CEO and president Viktor Gushan and ]-Transnistrian Ilya Kazmaly, who were previously ] officers. | ||
The company has close ties with the political power of Transnistria, with two of its employees being members of parliament for ], the party which have the majority in Transnistrian Supreme Soviet.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> <ref></ref> | |||
== References == | == References == |
Revision as of 16:08, 1 November 2006
Sheriff (in Cyrillic: Шериф) is the second-largest company based in Transnistria.
It owns a chain of petrol stations, a chain of supermarkets, a TV channel, a publishing house, a construction company, a Mercedes-Benz dealer, an advertising agency, a spirits factory, two bread factories, a mobile phone network, the football club FC Sheriff Tiraspol and its newly built Sheriff Stadium at an estimated cost of $200 million including a five-star hotel still under construction.
The name came from the two founders of the company, the Ukrainian-Transnistrian CEO and president Viktor Gushan and Russo-Transnistrian Ilya Kazmaly, who were previously Soviet police officers.
The company has close ties with the political power of Transnistria, with two of its employees being members of parliament for Renewal, the party which have the majority in Transnistrian Supreme Soviet.
References
- Sports in Pridnestrovie: Going for Gold
- Biography of MP Ilya Kazmaly, 2006
- Biography of MP Ilona Tyuryaeva, 2006
- Sheriff, Pridnestrovie's second largest company, 2005
- BBC News: Misery in a pariah state, 2004
External links
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