Argun Reserve
Argun Reserve

The Chechen State Historical, Architectural, and Natural Museum-Reserve is a nature reserve located in the southern part of the Chechen Republic within the Vedeno Nature Reserve, encompassing the entire Itum-Kali and Sharoi districts and parts of the Achkhoy-Martan, Vedeno, and Shatoi districts. It was established on June 2, 1988, by decree of the Council of Ministers of the RSFSR. Its area is 233,800 hectares. It's safe to say that the Chechen Nature Reserve is an open-air museum. It encompasses the historical and natural monuments of the Argun Gorge. Among the natural monuments within the Chechen Museum-Reserve, the most notable is the Sheki-Khyekh Cave, home to sulfur springs and a hydrogen sulfide river. The cultural and historical sites include approximately 150 tower complexes from the early and late Middle Ages, religious buildings, military and residential towers, early Muslim burial sites, cyclopean structures, and other historical monuments. Many of the museum-reserve's buildings are in ruins.

In the assembly hall of the Republican Center for Culture and Art, an event was held within the framework of monthly planned measures to prevent corruption on the topic: “Corruption crimes and responsibility”.

Employees of the GBU "Argun Museum-Reserve" took part in this event.

The purpose of the event: to form the present system

knowledge about the basics of the state anti-corruption policy of the Russian Federation, the history of its formation and development trends, as well as skills to identify corruption and determine priority areas for combating corruption in the Russian Federation. Corruption is a serious threat to democracy and human rights that undermines the rule of law and the moral fabric of society.

The conversation was conducted by the engineer for labor protection of the ensemble "Bashlam" Musostov Ruslan. The event was attended by employees of institutions subordinated to the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic in the amount of 33 people.

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