ISSN: 1391 - 0531
Sunday April 20, 2008
Vol. 42 - No 47
International  

The President who loves women

At Sardinian resort, Putin shows his rakish side in denying reports of affair

By Alessandra Rizzo

PORTO ROTONDO, Sardinia, Saturday (AP) - Perhaps it was the setting -- one of Italy's most romantic resorts. Or the company -- standing next to Italy's famously flirtatious premier. But the normally stern Vladimir Putin showed the world another side of his character Friday, laughing off questions about an extramarital affair with a champion gymnast. While Putin denied the rumors, he seemed to delight in projecting a new image to the world: ladies' man.

Russia’s former gymnast Alina Kabayeva, the woman in the centre of a controversy, arrives for the Laureus Sports Awards in St. Petersburg in February this year. Inset: Kabayeva performs with ball for a silver medal during individual all-around competition during the 22nd European Rhythmic Gymnastics Championship in Moscow. Putin on Friday denied a tabloid report that he had divorced his wife and intended to marry the champion gymnast less than half his age. (AP)

The news conference that followed meetings at Italian leader Silvio Berlusconi's lavish Sardinian villa started off with standard political fare: toasts to bilateral ties, talk of business deals. Things took a racy turn when a Kremlin journalist asked the Russian president about tabloid reports that he had divorced his wife and intended to marry a gymnast less than half his age.

While Putin's denial was categorical -- ''Not a single word of truth'' -- he proceeded to embark on a gushing paean to the fairer sex that might have made even Berlusconi proud. ''In other publications of the same type, the names of other successful, beautiful young women from Russia are mentioned,'' Putin began. ''I think it won't be unexpected if I say that I like them all _ just as I like all Russian women.''

Russian women, he declared, are ''the most talented and beautiful'' in the world. ''If anyone can compete, it may be only Italian women,'' Putin said. Berlusconi laughed and raised his eyebrows in approval. The reporters cheered and applauded. The Italian premier-elect, who triumphed in national elections this week, has long been a friend and political ally of Putin _ and he was quick to show his loyalty.

He mockingly pretended to mow down the offending reporter with a machine gun, then jokingly proposed swapping the Russian press with the Italian press.

Berlusconi likes to play the ladies' man himself, and last year was publicly rebuked by his wife for his flirtatious behavior with other women. He quickly responded with a love letter that was also published in a newspaper. Putin, while not often cast as a Casanova, has never shied away from presenting a virile image.

He has been photographed practicing judo, at the cockpit of a fighter jet and skiing down Alpine slopes. In August, he caused a stir by stripping off his shirt for the cameras while on holiday with Prince Albert II of Monaco in the Siberian mountains.The pictures sent pulses racing among his female admirers.

However, womanizing has not been much of a part of his public persona. The tabloid Moskovsky Korrespondent reported Saturday that Putin, 55, divorced his wife, Lyudmila, two months ago and planned to marry Alina Kabayeva, 24, a former champion rhythmic gymnast. His wife did not accompany him to Sardinia.

Kabayeva, who won a gold medal at the 2004 Summer Games, is now a member of the lower house of Russia's parliament from a pro-Kremlin party. Putin, using the earthy language that has become his trademark, scolded the media for intruding on his private life.

''I have always had a negative opinion of those who, with their snotty noses and their erotic fantasies, meddle in other people's lives,'' Putin said. The Web site of Moskovsky Korrespondent had been taken off-line Friday. The head of the paper's publishing house reportedly said, however, that the paper was suspended because it had overspent its budget.

In this Dec. 2, 2007 file photo, Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and his wife Lyudmila walk at a polling station in Moscow during the parliamentary election

Artyom Artyomov, the general director of Natsionalnaya Mediakompaniya publishing house, said the paper had ''exceeded the initial plan of expenses that was established about a half-year ago,'' according to radio station Ekho Moskvy. He also reportedly said there were internal disagreements at the paper. No one at the newspaper was available to comment Friday night.

The friendship between Putin and Berlusconi goes back to Berlusconi's last government, from 2001-2006, during which he frequently defended Putin in the face of international concerns over the state of democracy in Russia.

The private talks at Berlusconi's sprawling complex on the posh Costa Smeralda _ or Emerald Coast _ included a performance by dancers from a popular show who typically are scantily clad, which Berlusconi said Putin appreciated. Berlusconi said that everything is easier when there is ''esteem, trust, respect and friendship.''

''It is a deep friendship, which, as in all things in life, helps better understanding and making decisions for the best -- in this case in the interest not only of our countries but of the global community.''

 
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