The launch of mass production of the Russian medium-haul passenger airliner MC-21 is planned.[2]
Commissioning of the 2nd power unit at Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant-2 with a VVER-1200 reactor.[3]
January - March[]
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Protests in Saint Petersburg
9 January – : three dead, one in serious condition, and six missing in an avalanche in Norilsk which buried houses. An event like this has never happened in Norilsk, despite avalanches being common in the region, this was the first event of such magnitude in terms of fatalities and missing persons.[4]
11 January – In Moscow, four soldiers are killed after a truck crashes into the convoy of buses they are in. 40 other soldiers were reported to be injured.[5]
12 January – [ru]: eight people die in an apartment fire in Yekaterinburg. It is reported that the victims succumbed to carbon monoxide poisoning, rather than the flames. It is reported that among the eight fatalities, there was a child[6] The cause of the fire is under investigation, and it is thought that the fire was accidental.[7]
23 January – Protests against the arrest of Alexei Navalny begin throughout Russia.[8]
April - June[]
8 April – Secretary of Security Council of RussiaNikolai Patrushev denies reports of Russia's plans to intervene in Ukraine following reports of Russian troops amassing near the Russo-Ukrainian border.[9]
11 May – Nine people are killed and dozens are injured following a mass shooting at a school in Kazan, the capital of Tatarstan .
29 May – Moscow Vostochny railway station is opened in Moscow and is the first new railway station to be built in the Russian capital since 1902.[10]
3—6 June – XXIV St. Petersburg International Economic Forum takes place.[11]
11 June — 11 July – UEFA Euro 2020.[12]Gazprom Arena hosts some of the games.
July–September[]
6 July – An Antonov An-26 carrying 28 passengers and crews slams into a steep cliff while on approach to Palana. All 28 people on board are killed in the crash, including Olga Mokhireva, the mayor of Palana.[13]
6—8 July – At least eight people are killed by floods caused by heavy rains in Krasnodar Krai.[14]
16 July – An Antonov An-28 operating as SiLA Airlines Flight 42 crash lands into a swamp in Tomsk Oblast following an engine failure mid-flight. Two injuries are reported in the incident.
2 August – A tornado kills three people in Andreapol (Tver Oblast).[15]
12 August
A helicopter carrying 16 people, most of whom are tourists, crashes into a lake in Kamchatka. At least eight are rescued and eight others are feared dead.[16]
Russian authorities detains the head of Hypersonic System Research Institute Alexander Kuranov for suspected treason.[17]
[ru]: Two people die and 24 are injured after a PAZ-4234 explodes in Voronezh. The causes are unknown.
7 December – Gunman opens fire in Moscow services center, kills 2 people and injures 4.[19]
13 December - Russia's domestic intelligence service said it had arrested 106 supporters of what it called a Ukrainian neo-Nazi youth group planning attacks and mass murders. The Federal Security Service (FSB) said the "Maniacs Cult of Murder" group had been set up by a Ukrainian under the patronage of Ukraine's intelligence services. The FSB, in its statement, said it had made detentions in 37 of Russia's more than 80 regions and that two of the detainees had planned to attack educational institutions.[20]
Deaths[]
14 January – Boris Grachevsky, film director (b. 1949)
28 January – Vasily Lanovoy, actor (b. 1934)
13 February – Yury Vlasov, weightlifter (b. 1935)
18 February – Andrey Myagkov, actor (b. 1938)
7 May – Yegor Ligachyov, Soviet politician (b. 1920)
20 June – Anatoly Lysenko, television figure, journalist and producer (b. 1937)
5 July – Vladimir Menshov, actor (b. 1939)
9 August – Sergey Kovalyov, human rights activist (b. 1930)
18 August – Evgeny Sveshnikov, Russian chess player and writer (b. 1950)[21]