Zürcher Nachrichten - Putin's health: pivotal yet shrouded in uncertainty

EUR -
AED 3.883446
AFN 71.895736
ALL 97.900638
AMD 411.253615
ANG 1.90568
AOA 964.776505
ARS 1059.179559
AUD 1.622625
AWG 1.897279
AZN 1.794959
BAM 1.957984
BBD 2.134981
BDT 126.360933
BGN 1.952776
BHD 0.398504
BIF 3064.552793
BMD 1.057289
BND 1.41652
BOB 7.333387
BRL 6.114624
BSD 1.057409
BTN 89.29813
BWP 14.386045
BYN 3.460359
BYR 20722.868637
BZD 2.131438
CAD 1.478328
CDF 3035.47747
CHF 0.934506
CLF 0.037204
CLP 1026.5747
CNY 7.654248
CNH 7.656799
COP 4647.515635
CRC 537.514753
CUC 1.057289
CUP 28.018164
CVE 110.53916
CZK 25.294629
DJF 187.901514
DKK 7.459164
DOP 64.018911
DZD 140.877325
EGP 52.381066
ERN 15.859338
ETB 128.751425
FJD 2.395923
FKP 0.834536
GBP 0.83492
GEL 2.881119
GGP 0.834536
GHS 16.87422
GIP 0.834536
GMD 75.067091
GNF 9125.463708
GTQ 8.163336
GYD 221.116616
HKD 8.229136
HNL 26.617242
HRK 7.541918
HTG 138.904923
HUF 407.915932
IDR 16767.866866
ILS 3.957687
IMP 0.834536
INR 89.227706
IQD 1385.577518
IRR 44503.944681
ISK 145.504269
JEP 0.834536
JMD 167.707047
JOD 0.749935
JPY 163.649346
KES 135.859859
KGS 91.447738
KHR 4283.078889
KMF 491.374875
KPW 951.559894
KRW 1474.675567
KWD 0.325064
KYD 0.881183
KZT 524.710108
LAK 23207.498531
LBP 94733.114058
LKR 307.643121
LRD 192.444637
LSL 18.973037
LTL 3.1219
LVL 0.639544
LYD 5.164848
MAD 10.575017
MDL 19.217434
MGA 4926.967975
MKD 61.463334
MMK 3434.034132
MNT 3592.6687
MOP 8.477055
MRU 42.212296
MUR 48.931243
MVR 16.345495
MWK 1834.396561
MXN 21.312159
MYR 4.729253
MZN 67.587204
NAD 18.978021
NGN 1775.828054
NIO 38.855402
NOK 11.632492
NPR 142.877408
NZD 1.79237
OMR 0.407066
PAB 1.057409
PEN 4.012387
PGK 4.252446
PHP 62.246315
PKR 293.715725
PLN 4.334931
PYG 8235.184869
QAR 3.849065
RON 4.976764
RSD 116.97634
RUB 106.338364
RWF 1448.486226
SAR 3.969218
SBD 8.849003
SCR 14.364561
SDG 635.957428
SEK 11.567035
SGD 1.416107
SHP 0.834536
SLE 23.947671
SLL 22170.831226
SOS 604.244517
SRD 37.574471
STD 21883.752116
SVC 9.252319
SYP 2656.470724
SZL 18.978078
THB 36.516676
TJS 11.239936
TMT 3.700512
TND 3.341085
TOP 2.476276
TRY 36.480924
TTD 7.180212
TWD 34.260928
TZS 2806.026596
UAH 43.654088
UGX 3893.342324
USD 1.057289
UYU 45.390625
UZS 13559.734259
VES 48.349526
VND 26860.432537
VUV 125.5235
WST 2.951519
XAF 656.708074
XAG 0.033917
XAU 0.000402
XCD 2.857377
XDR 0.804297
XOF 655.519126
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.163785
ZAR 19.106588
ZMK 9516.868831
ZMW 29.211409
ZWL 340.446696
  • RBGPF

    -0.4400

    59.75

    -0.74%

  • CMSC

    -0.0290

    24.595

    -0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0480

    24.342

    -0.2%

  • RELX

    0.2600

    45.3

    +0.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    6.68

    -2.54%

  • BCC

    -3.0500

    138.49

    -2.2%

  • SCS

    -0.1150

    13.085

    -0.88%

  • RIO

    0.2200

    62.34

    +0.35%

  • VOD

    -0.0250

    8.895

    -0.28%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.23

    0%

  • NGG

    0.8000

    63.7

    +1.26%

  • GSK

    -0.2350

    33.455

    -0.7%

  • BCE

    -0.0500

    27.18

    -0.18%

  • BTI

    0.2650

    36.945

    +0.72%

  • AZN

    0.3900

    63.78

    +0.61%

  • BP

    -0.3950

    29.025

    -1.36%

Putin's health: pivotal yet shrouded in uncertainty
Putin's health: pivotal yet shrouded in uncertainty / Photo: Mikhail METZEL - SPUTNIK/AFP

Putin's health: pivotal yet shrouded in uncertainty

Baths in blood extracted from the antlers of Siberian deer. Excrements scooped up by loyal officials to evade analysis. Mysterious absences for emergency medical treatment.

Text size:

The claims made about the health of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who will be 70 in October, are lurid and macabre, as well as impossible to verify.

But they illustrate how little is known about the health of a leader whose medical condition is fundamental to the future of Europe, all the more so after he ordered Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Over the course of Putin's two decades in power, remarkably little has emerged about his health, beyond the famous images provided by the Kremlin showing him bare-chested in a bid to project an image of macho strength.

But scrutiny has now increased with the war that Putin unleashed against Russia's neighbour.

- What are the claims? -

The most in-depth investigation into Putin's health was published in April by the Russian-language news site Proekt, which used open-source data to conclude that the president's trips to the southern resort city of Sochi were synchronised with those of a large number of doctors.

They included specialist in thyroid cancer Yevgeny Selivanov, whose visits to Sochi frequently coincided with Putin's sudden absences from the public eye over the past years.

It also alleged that one of the methods used by Putin to ensure longevity were baths in blood extracted from deer antlers in Siberia, a method recommended by his friend Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu, who is from Siberia.

French weekly Paris Match this month said that on visits to Saudi Arabia in 2019 and France in 2017, Putin was accompanied by a team whenever he went to the toilet, to keep his excretions so no foreign power could medically analyse his urine or stools.

Even more sensationally, US publication Newsweek said in June that Putin had undergone treatment for advanced cancer in April, citing American intelligence. The US National Security Council denied the existence of such briefings.

Ukraine's military intelligence chief, Major General Kyrylo Budanov, in a mid-May interview with Sky News claimed without evidence that Putin has cancer.

Proekt also alleged that the Kremlin set up a fake office in Sochi that purported to look like the one at his suburban Moscow residence to make it look like he was working in the Russian capital rather than resting at the Black Sea resort.

- What information is there?

The only time the Kremlin confirmed Putin was suffering a health problem was the fall of 2012, when he cancelled several meetings and vanished from public life after being seen moving awkwardly.

The Kremlin at the time said he had pulled a muscle and one newspaper said he aggravated a back problem during a stunt when he flew with cranes on a motorised hang-glider. But Proekt alleges it was here that his major health problems began.

The Covid-19 pandemic has also seen sometimes odd conduct from the Russian leader.

The Kremlin said he had been vaccinated, but unlike almost all other world leaders, no images ever emerged of his jab. Those coming into close contact with him, including journalists, were subject to the most stringent precautions such as days of quarantine.

Visiting world leaders who did not accept the Kremlin's stringent conditions -- such as French President Emmanuel Macron and UN chief Antonio Guterres -- were banished to the end of a now notoriously long table.

Those who accepted the Kremlin's demands, including a Russian Covid test, and possibly quarantine, such as Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan were allowed a handshake and even an embrace.

A meeting with Shoigu on Ukraine in late April also fuelled rumours with Putin tightly gripping the table in what some saw a bid to stop body tremors. Numerous videos have also shown one of Putin's feet fidgeting during meetings.

The Kremlin has meanwhile postponed Putin's annual direct line phone-in with the Russian people, usually a fixture in June, to a later date without explanation.

Huge efforts appear to have been made to protect Putin. In his 2020 annual news conference only a handful of reporters -- quarantined and tested beforehand -- were allowed in the room with him, while others massed in another hall.

In 2021, the event returned to its usual format but with a vast distance between the front row of journalists and Putin's desk. Even now, with the business of government returning to normal in most of the world, Putin conducts most domestic business via video.

What does the Kremlin say?

The Kremlin, via Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov, has vehemently denied all claims that the Russian president is suffering from any serious health problem.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov took the highly unusual step in an interview with French television channel TF1 in late May to deny Putin was ill, saying "I don't think that sane people can see in this person signs of some kind of illness or ailment" and claiming that the Russian leader appeared in public "every day".

Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko, ostracised by the West but a frequent face-to-face interlocutor with Putin, insisted in a March interview with Japanese television that the Russian leader was in rude health.

"If you think that something is wrong with President Putin or something happened, you are, as we say, the most pitiful person on earth," he said.

In recent public appearances -- including a forum on Peter the Great and a meeting with Turkmenistan President Serdar Berdymukhamedov -- Putin has also shown no sign of physical frailty.

Why does it matter?

Putin remains the undisputed leader of Russia and most observers expect him to seek a third consecutive mandate in 2014, after recent controversial constitutional changes allowing him to do so.

There is no obvious successor and, as commander in chief of the Russian forces, it was the decision of Putin to invade Ukraine on February 24.

"The country does not know a word of truth about the physical and emotional health of the person who runs it," said the editor-in-chief of Proekt, Roman Badanin.

"The whole planet does not know if a person who could destroy all of humanity by pressing a red button is healthy."

W.O.Ludwig--NZN