Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks to journalists at
the Bocharov Ruchei state residence in Sochi.
REUTERS/Alexsey Druginyn/Ria Novosti/Pool
Russian President Vladimir Putin has admitted that some
of his most famous media adventures with wildlife have been
carefully staged but has said they were worthwhile because they
drew the public's attention to important conservation projects.
His macho appearances with everything from tigers to whales
have been a staple of Russian state TV for years, cementing
his image as a man of action but drawing mockery from critics
who have likened them to Soviet-style propaganda.
Although Putin's spokesman has previously revealed that at
least one of the stunts was a set-up, Putin until now has
appeared to play along with the exercises, allowing state
media to present them as they seem rather than how they
really are.
But in a rare meeting with a Kremlin critic after his latest
wildlife stunt - taking to the skies in a light aircraft with
a group of cranes last week - Putin admitted he had often
taken part in media exercises which were carefully staged.
Sometimes, he said the stunts had been over the top.
"Of course, there are excesses. And I am enraged about it,"
he told Masha Gessen, a journalist and Putin critic whom he
had invited for a meeting in he Kremlin cafeteria after she
was sacked from her job editing a travel magazine for
refusing to send reporters to cover the crane flight.
She wrote an account of her meeting with the president in
Bolshoi Gorod magazine.
"But I thought up these tigers myself. Twenty other countries
where tigers live, also started taking care of them," she
quoted him as saying, re ferring to an incident four years
ago when he was shown shooting a tiger with a tranquiliser
gun that looked like it was poised to attack someone.
Environmentalists later suggested the tiger had been driven
in from a zoo for Putin to shoot for the TV cameras.
"The leopards were also my idea," Putin was quoted as saying.
"Yes, I know, they were caught before but the most important
thing is to draw public attention to the problem."
He was apparently referring to an episode in 2011 when he was
shown tagging and releasing a rare and injured snow leopard.
Environmentalists again said it had been brought in
specially.
"Everything I do in this area (wildlife conservation) should
have nothing to do with politics. But for a man in my
position it is very difficult," Putin said.
Putin also admitted that a stunt last year for which he
donned a wet suit and dove to the bottom of the Black Sea to
apparently discover ancient amphorae was also not what it
seemed.
"Why did I dive? Not to show my gills off but to make sure
people learn history. Of course it was a set up," the
journalist quoted Putin as saying.
Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in the Black
Sea resort of Sochi, where Putin is spending a few days this
week, that Gessen had provided "a correct account of the
meeting except for some insignificant details."
Putin's summons to Gessen appeared to be an attempt to
mediate in her dispute with her former employer.
She said that Putin, flanked by the magazine's owner, asked
her whether she really wanted to have her job back or whether
she was comfortable with the role of "a persecuted
journalist" in which case the conversation did not make
sense.
Gessen wrote that she had refused to accept Putin's offer to
take her old job back, saying she did not want to work in a
magazine where an editor-in-chief is appointed by Putin.
However, Peskov said that Gessen had initially agreed to take
her old job back only to change her mind the following day.
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.