About the Author
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Ben Aris arrived in Moscow in October 1993 as a reporter two weeks before Boris Yeltsin sent the tanks onto the streets as part of his show down with the Communist-dominated Duma, plunging the country into a violent constitutional crisis.
He spent just over two years travelling throughout the region living and working in many of the former Soviet republics and regions of Russia – including stints in Central Asia and the Baltic States – he arrived back in Moscow in 1996 in time for Yeltsin’s dramatic re-election as president of the Russian Federation.
Over the next eight years Ben had a ringside seat to the rise of the oligarchs – interviewing most of them as they built their empires – and reported the first stock market boom for the international press, only to see it collapse again in the 1998 financial crisis.
As the third longest serving foreign correspondent in Russia, Ben has interviewed most of Russia's leading lights and seen first hand the changes the country has gone through since the fall of the Soviet Union.
By 1999 Ben was Moscow bureau chief for the Daily Telegraph and covered the two Chechen wars and the appearance of Putin. However, as the economy began to grow strongly again in 2000 he switched his focus back to business as contributing editor for the Banker and a regular contributor to the Wall Street Journal and other leading business publications.
Ben continues to write regularly for most of the mainstream press, but in 2003 he moved to Berlin as acting bureau chief for the Guardian before leaving to found his own online publication businessneweurope.eu, which specializes in covering business, finance, economics and politics in Eastern, Central and Southeastern Europe.