
U211-A Power Regulator
Features:
Power in : AC 100Vď˝?00V; Power out : AC 200V , 2kW
Voltage protection device under unstable voltage
Easily installed into fuel dispenser
100% Factory Tested.
Packing:
Weight: Dimension:
10.3kg/case of 1 150Ă—200Ă—340mm/case of 1
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
hestrated the seizure of a school in Beslan. More than 300 people died, half of
them children. Beslan shocked him, he admitted, but only briefly. It was the Russians fault, he said, for
not agreeing to his conditions. Perhaps he quelled his doubts with the memory of his own wife and
children, killed in a Russian air raid in 1995, and of Stalin s wholesale deportation of the Chechens in
1944 to Kazakhstan, when as many as 100,000 perished.
By the end, Mr Basayev had alienated most of the Chechens who once revered him, ruptured the
separatist movement and disgraced its cause abroad—a cause that by then had anyway morphed into the
pursuit of an Islamist state across the north Caucasus. Both it, and Mr Basayev, had become mixed up
with the severe Wahhabist doctrines which, after the collapse of communism, seeped into the Caucasus
from the Middle East. And yet he had not always been a fanatic, or a monster. His first name, Shamil,
was that of a 19th-century imam who had waged unremitting war against the tsarist armies round
Vedeno, Mr Basayev s home village. As a you fuel dispenser ng man, though, he seemed keener on Che Guevara than
on Muhammad.
Nor did he always hate Russia. He served as a fireman in the So fuel dispenser viet army and wanted to study law, but
wound up lackadaisically selling computers in Moscow. Then the Soviet Union collapsed, and he returned
to the Caucasus to fight. He battled for the freedom of Abkhazia in a Russian-backed coalition against the
Georgians. He fought with distinction in Russia s first Chechen war, launched by Boris Yeltsin in 1994; the
bandit raid he led into Dagestan in 1999 helped to ignite the second. In between them, during
Chechnya s short spell of de fact fuel dispenser o independence, he was briefly its prime minister. He was too powerful a
figure to be ignored; but by then he was a man only of violence, and peaceful politics bored him.
Russia s useful demon
Soon before his death he was appointed vice-president of Ichkeria, the diehard rebels name for their
non-existent state. To b