Russian
president and Lyudmila Putin reveal that they are no longer living together by
'their common decision'
The Guardian, Luke Harding and Alexander Winning in Moscow, Thursday 6 June 2013
The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, and Lyudmila Putin leave a poling station in Moscow in March 2012. Photograph: Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP |
Vladimir Putin and his wife, Lyudmila, have announced their separation after 30 years of marriage, ending years of speculation about their relationship. She had rarely been seen in public in recent months, prompting media speculation about the president's marriage.
Confirmation
came on Thursday evening when the Putins gave an interview to the state-run TV
channel Russia 24 after attending a ballet at the State Kremlin Palace. Asked
about a rumour that they no longer lived together, Putin, 60, said: "That
is true."
Mrs Putin,
55, said it had been "our common decision. And our marriage is over due to
the fact that we barely see each other".
Asked if
they had divorced, she said it was a "civilised divorce". But Putin's
spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, later clarified that the Putins aren't yet legally
divorced and that he didn't know when the divorce proceedings would be finalized.
"Everything
that's related to Putin's personal life is his business alone, he has never
made it a subject for public discussion. That's his principle, and he has
earned that right, so let's treat it with respect," Peskov said.
The couple,
who have two daughters in their 20s, had last been seen in public together at
Putin's inauguration to his third presidential term in May 2012.
"We
really love our children, are very proud of them and see them regularly,"
Putin said. Rumours that he and his wife had separated have circulated for
years, and amount to Moscow's worst kept secret. During one of their rare
public appearances together back in 2010, they sat awkwardly on a sofa as a
census-taker asked them questions.
Mrs Putin –
or Mrs Putina in Russian – seemed dazed, and uncertain how to react in the
presence of her husband. Her demeanour fuelled allegations that she had retired
to an Orthodox convent or was leading a life separate from her husband.
During
Putin's first presidential stint between 2000 and 2004, he took his wife on
several foreign trips. But by his second term he was travelling solo. Meanwhile
there was speculation that Putin had embarked on a series of dalliances with
other, much younger women. In 2008 he publicly denied claims that he was about
to divorce his wife and marry Alina Kabaeva, a 27-year-old rhythmical gymnast
with "incredible flexibility". Evening Standard owner Alexander
Lebedev shut down his tabloid Moscow newspaper after it broke the story.
During a
visit to Italy and while standing alongside – fittingly – Silvio Berlusconi,
Putin was asked about the story by a brave female reporter.
Putin
replied: "There is not a word of truth in what you say." Then he
added: "I have always treated badly those who poke their noses and their
erotic fantasies into someone else's life."
Speculation
about Putin's love life is paradoxically a product of the Kremlin's own
ultra-secretive habits.
Since
becoming president in 2000, Putin has starred in a non-stop action-man drama –
skiing down volcanoes, stunning tigers and polar bears, and even flying with
cranes, his exploits covered nightly by state-controlled TV.
But despite
this exhaustive image management, Kremlin aides have said nothing about Putin's
personal life. There are practically no photos of the Putins' two grown-up
daughters.
For months
at a time, Mrs Putin would vanish, as if kidnapped by aliens. Given this news
blackout it was inevitable that half-truths, educated speculation and lurid
nonsense would fill the vacuum.
Lyudmila's
confirmation that she and her husband have split is the rarest thing in
Moscow's twilight informational world: a genuine fact.
Related Article:
SB: Okay. Thank you, Lord. I’m going to put the Vladimir Putin question ahead of the Boston bombing question. I think a lot of Russian readers and listeners are wondering if they can trust Vladimir Putin.
Now, you’ve said he was in containment and he’s coming out of containment. Can you direct yourself to Russian listeners, please, and tell them what they need to know about Vladimir Putin, please?
AAM: Well, I will say that he has been gradually coming out of containment, and reintegrated, shall we say, into society and into his role and decisions. So what I say to you is be vigilant and be the observer. Do not get caught in what appears to be the drama of this readjustment of power. So, allow the shifting of the core and the centers of power to be adjusted.
Russia has a very important role to play in the future years, as I have said before. So, stand back, my friends. Be the observer. I am not asking you to extend your wholehearted trust and empathy to this individual. What I am asking you to do is to extend trust to your own discernment, because it is not 100 per cent clean, but it is not dirty either.
Now, you’ve said he was in containment and he’s coming out of containment. Can you direct yourself to Russian listeners, please, and tell them what they need to know about Vladimir Putin, please?
AAM: Well, I will say that he has been gradually coming out of containment, and reintegrated, shall we say, into society and into his role and decisions. So what I say to you is be vigilant and be the observer. Do not get caught in what appears to be the drama of this readjustment of power. So, allow the shifting of the core and the centers of power to be adjusted.
Russia has a very important role to play in the future years, as I have said before. So, stand back, my friends. Be the observer. I am not asking you to extend your wholehearted trust and empathy to this individual. What I am asking you to do is to extend trust to your own discernment, because it is not 100 per cent clean, but it is not dirty either.
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