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The six post-Soviet NRS of Abkhazia, Artsakh, South Ossetia, Moldova, Donetsk,
and Lugansk are formally constituted as presidential-parliamentary republics.36 The
presidents of the NRS oversee executives headed by a prime minister, a local army and
security agencies. Informally, the president and their administration are power
institutions that in usual, non-urgent situations are autonomous from any type of formal
domestic parliamentary control. At the same time, they need to balance informal control
by the sponsor state with local informal control by power groups and clans. The
presidents control all types of military units on their territories (except for the sponsor
state’s troops, where applicable). They control the central budget and financial flows from
the sponsor state, as well as the most profitable sectors of their formal and shadow
economies. The analysis of the biographies of the presidents of the NRS featured in this
study shows that―at least since 2000―they have all been connected either to sponsor
states’ security services or armies. Even though formally all NRS’ presidents were elected
to their positions, the elections were neither free, nor fair (Freedom House 2019; d6, d7,
Нейтральная статья, или нет GagogaSus (обс.) 13:30, 3 сентября 2022 (UTC)[ответить]__DTELLIPSISBUTTON__{"threadItem":{"timestamp":"20220903133000","author":"GagogaSus","type":"comment","level":1,"id":"c-GagogaSus-20220903133000-\u041d\u0435\u0439\u0442\u0440\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u044c_\u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u044c\u0438?","replies":[]}}-->