DUSHANBE, November 20, 2014, Asia-Plus – A court in Moscow oblast has ruled that 32-year-old Firouza Savushkina from Tajikistan, who is a common wife of 23-year-old Yury Glazyev, the son of top Kremlin adviser and well-known nationalist Sergei Glazyev, will be released from the pretrial detention center as criminal charges brought against her have been dropped, according to Lifenews.ru website.

The website notes that the court decided to release pregnant Firouza Savushkina after she admitted her guilt and plaintiff, Dilafrouz Mirzoyeva, who is also migrant from Tajikistan, recalled her lawsuit.

We will recall that Mirzoyeva, who also works for the Glazyev household, claimed Savushkina had attacked her with a knife, scratched her face, and threatened to kill her because she was seen as a potential rival.

Firouza found herself in the center of scandal when she fell in love with her employer’s son.  Savushkina, a single mother from Tajikistan, was hired to clean the elder Glazyev''s Moscow apartment.  But a resulting love affair has made a mess of the Glazyev household.

Yury Glazyev was smitten upon meeting Savushkina, and eventually the two were engaged to marry despite the differences in their age and social status.

“Finding Firouza was the biggest achievement of my life,” Yury Glazyev says in a homemade video that shows him dancing in the company of Savushkina, her daughter, and several women with Central Asian features.

Yury Glazyev describes Savushkina as his “happiness” and sunshine, and vows to spend the rest of his life with her and her daughter, Polina.

Photos published on Russian media show the pair strolling on the beach, lying in the park, and dining around a table laden with Central Asian food.

It remains unclear when the love affair began, but Yury Glazyev says Savushkina is expecting his child.

The pair''s happiness, however, came to an abrupt end on September 24, when Savushkina was placed behind bars and accused of making death threats to fellow Tajik migrant Dilafrouz Mirzoyeva, who also works for the Glazyev household.  She claimed Savushkina had attacked her with a knife, scratched her face, and threatened to kill her because she was seen as a potential rival.

Yury Glazyev, however, has a different version of events.  He believes the court case is part of a plot by his influential parents to keep the vulnerable foreign maid away from him.

Yury Glazyev acknowledges that his parents -- especially his mother, whom he refers to as "Olga" -- were less than impressed by their love-struck son''s choice of a bride.

Sergei Glazyev, after all, is a former cabinet minister and lawmaker, who for the past two years has served as an adviser to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Savushkina, on the other hand, belongs to the 1.2 million-strong contingent of Tajik labor migrants, many of whom eke out a living and often face racially motivated insults in Russia.

Yury Glazyev claims his mother strongly disapproves of Savushkina, dubbing her a gold-digger who intends to destroy son and obtain his fortune.