On Tue, 27 Sep 2011, Arthur David Olson wrote:
I'm asking for information to use in specifying time zone abbreviations for Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine. For all three I can use:
1. References to government documents that specify time zone names or abbreviations. 2. References to government documents that specify whether current time is considered to be "standard" time or "saving" time. Here is the bulletin containing Decree #1229 of Belarussian Council of Ministers (page 5, marked as 5/34447) that cancelled "saving" time: http://pravo.by/pdf/2011-106/2011-106(011-024).pdf
1. Perform time measurement on the territory of Republic of Belarus in accordance with international time zones system using zone time plus one hour without transition to seasonal time. 2. Declare obsolete decree N317 (1996.05.13) of Belarussian Council of Ministers "Change of time measurement on territory of Republic of Belarus". 3. This decree comes in action at the time of its official publication. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Time terms in Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine are regulated with GOST 8.567-99 which was taked in use in Belarus since 2001: http://tnpa.by/KartochkaDoc.php?UrlRN=84396&UrlIDGLOBAL=84396 GOST itself (page scans): http://standartgost.ru/%D0%93%D0%9E%D0%A1%D0%A2%208.567-99 It is worth to point that according to the GOST 8.567-99, (art. 3.1.19) "zone time" is defined as "unified time within the same time zone (1/24th part of Earth area limited by meridians), measured using national scale of the coordinated time and distanced from it by number of hours equal to zone number". Further, in a comment to article 3.1.19, it is defined that zone time corrected by the government is called "decree time". In Russia in addition to Decree #725, there is Federal Law #107-FZ "Time calculation", http://www.rg.ru/2011/06/06/vremya-dok.html, that defines specific terms. Russian time is defined relative to "Moscow time" which is, according to the law, article 5, "time of time zone in which the capital of Russian Federation -- Moscow city -- is situated". Decree #725 amends this definition by precisely defining that 'in accordance with article 5 law 107-FZ, Moscow time is UTC(SU)+4'. In Belarus time calculation-related rules are defined and revised by Interdisciplinary commission on Time, Frequency, and Earth rotation measurments. Unfortunately, apart from the decree #403 that defined the Commission itself, I was unable to find any documented traces of its decisions (or my search-fu on pravo.by is weak). http://pravo.by/pdf/2007-82/2007-82(047-071).pdf (pages 7-9, marked as 5/24967). I have asked relevant people from National Metrology Institute of Belarus (BelGIM) of their opinion. Hopefully, the answer will come "soon". -- / Alexander Bokovoy