The 62-year-old
leader met the president of Kyrgystan at a lavish Tsarist-era palace outside St Petersburg in his
first appearance since Feb. 5. His unexplained absence had fueled rumors he was
ill, had been overthrown by the army or had even flown abroad to attend the
birth of a love child.
"It would be
boring without gossip," Putin said, smiling easily before television
cameras and looking relaxed, if pale, in a dark suit and tie.
His spokesman, Dmitry
Peskov, mocked the press for its interest, referring sarcastically to the
various rumors: "So you've seen the broken, paralyzed president, who has
been captured by generals? He's only just flown in from Switzerland ,
where he attended a birth as you know."
In a carefully
choreographed double-act, Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev also vouched for
the Russian leader's health, saying that Putin "just now drove me around
the grounds; he himself sat at the wheel."
The Russian leader
prides himself on his macho image. In 2008 he said he worked like a
"galley slave" to run Russia .
Typically, he is shown most days on state-controlled television, meeting
officials in Moscow or traveling to Russia 's
far-flung regions.
During his absence,
the Kremlin unexpectedly canceled a trip to Kazakhstan and a meeting with
officers of the successor to the KGB. Pictures were posted on the Kremlin
website of meetings Putin had with public figures, which it later emerged had
been taken several days earlier.
The absence began a
week after an opposition leader was gunned down outside the Kremlin walls,
adding to an ominous atmosphere in a country suffering from an economic crisis
worsened by international sanctions imposed over Putin's decision to intervene
in neighboring Ukraine .
Throughout his
absence Russian officials had said that Putin had been working. Peskov said he
had answered "10 times over" what Putin was doing during his absence
from live appearances. "It is impossible to say anymore," he said.
Putin remains
hugely popular in Russia ,
which has experienced a surge of nationalist sentiment fueled by state-run
media since Putin sent troops to seize Ukraine 's
Crimea region a year ago.
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