Incidents

In Ulan-Us went normally, in Crimea began to limp: Putin's health was interested in Western media

According to Western media, the state of health of the Russian dictator has changed somewhat. On March 18, Russian President Vladimir Putin paid a visit to the occupied Crimea and Mariupol. During his stay on the Peninsula, the Western media saw that the Russian dictator was beating on one leg. About it writes Express on March 19. It is noted that 70-year-old Putin visited the occupied Crimea on March 18.

There he strolled Sevastopol, accompanied by the governor of the city of Mikhail Razvozhayev and six guards. Razvozhayev showed Putin the art school and the Chersonese Museum of Tavriysky. "However, Putin seemed to feel some discomfort during walking, which contrasts sharply with previous appearances in Moscow and Siberian city of Ulan-Ue, where he showed no signs of lameness," the newspaper reports.

The governor of Sevastopol stated that Putin's visit "was an absolute surprise", as it was initially planned to make a videoconference. In the Kremlin, in turn, they constantly reject the assumption that the Russian president is fighting diseases that threaten life, calling them "fake" news. In Moscow at a concert in Luzhniki on February 22, Putin sent to speak to himself in front of the Russians of the Caravian double.