Vladimir Shumeyko, first deputy prime minister, declared that the referendum would go ahead, but on April 25.
A series of big world developments proved the viability of the concept: the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis described by Russian journalists, Algerian elections through the eyes of the Arab press, the Maastricht referendum as written about in Europe, and Bill Clinton's election as predicted by American newspapers.
Russian Empire | Russian language | 1993 | Russian Academy of Sciences | 1993 in music | Russian Orthodox Church | Russian Civil War | 1993–94 in English football | Suez Crisis | Russian Revolution | Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic | Imperial Russian Navy | Russian Far East | Canadian federal election, 1993 | Russian Revolution (1917) | Cuban Missile Crisis | 1973 oil crisis | Russian Navy | 1993 in television | Russian Air Force | Cuban missile crisis | Center for Constitutional Rights | Imperial Russian Army | Constitutional Court | Russian literature | Iran hostage crisis | 1993 in baseball | 1993 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships | Final Crisis | Crisis on Infinite Earths |
The broadcast was finally closed down in the aftermath of Yeltsin's victory in his confrontation with the Russian Supreme Soviet (Nevzorov had supported the anti-Yeltsin side).