Jeered in Moscow, Putin seen as hero in province

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Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin gestures during a televised questions and answers session in Moscow December 15, 2011. REUTERS/Alexei Nikolsky/RIA Novosti/Pool

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin gestures during a televised questions and answers session in Moscow December 15, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Alexei Nikolsky/RIA Novosti/Pool

KYZYL, Russia | Mon Dec 19, 2011 9:19pm EST

KYZYL, Russia (Reuters) - Vladimir Putin, faced with mass protests in large cities, has received a hero's welcome in the remote Russian region of Tyva where he campaigned to mobilize his core supporters ahead of the presidential election in March 2012.

Tens of thousands of people have protested this month in Moscow and other cities against alleged fraud in the December 4 parliamentary election. Many directed their anger at Putin, who has ruled Russia since 2000.

In Tyva, a region on the border with Mongolia five hours by air from Moscow, the mood on Monday was different. Hundreds of locals, many wearing colorful local hats and overcoats, braved temperatures well below freezing to catch a glimpse of Putin.

"Putin is our leader, it is so good he could make it here," said Eres Khuruk, adding that he had waited in the cold in the barren steppe for two hours with his wife to shake Putin's hand and watch the ceremony of a railroad construction launch.

Putin hammered a golden spike at a spot outside the capital Kyzyl to mark the start of construction of Tyva's first railroad which will link the region, known for its wildlife and natural resources, to the Trans-Siberian Railway.

Workers and local residents rushed to Putin when he finished, trying to shake his hand, shouting "Vladimir Vladimirovich" and taking pictures. Putin looked confused as he moved through the exhilarated crowd.

"You should not wash your hands now," one worker told a female colleague who has just shaken Putin's hand and was smiling happily.

"I managed to hold his hand for the whole of 10 seconds," another worker said.

When completed, the 400-km (250-mile) railway will transport Tyva's coal and other mineral resources to markets such as Japan, China and South Korea as the region seeks to repeat the success story of neighboring Mongolia.

Putin's United Russia party scored over 85 percent of votes in the Buddhist region of 300,000 and many people have said they will vote for Putin again in the presidential election. Very few had heard of the protests in Moscow.

Putin's advisers are seeking to spin the protests as a whim of Moscow-based intellectuals who represent a tiny minority while the rest of the vast country still backs the 59-year-old leader.

"He is a sportsman and I am a sportsman. I respect him very much," Aidar, a sumo wrestler, said. "Moscow is very far," he added when asked what he thought of the protests.

Putin is a frequent guest in Tyva, one of Russia's most exotic corners. In 2007 he took Monaco's Prince Albert to the region for a rafting journey down the Yenisei River and a tour of an ancient Uigur fortress.

Widely circulated pictures of Putin riding a horse bare-chested and swimming across the river were taken in Tyva during his 2009 holiday.

The region's head, former martial arts fighter Sholban Kara-Ool, sought to express his indignation at Moscow protests when he met with Putin.

"Sometimes things we see in the mass media make us outraged. I just wanted to tell you what simple people think about it," Kara-Ool told Putin.

"Let's talk business," Putin responded, interrupting him. "What is the situation in the republic?"

(Reporting by Gleb Bryanski; Editing by Michael Roddy)

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Comments (2)
LeRuscino wrote:
Can we get this propaganda business right?

See http://rt.com/news/fox-moscow-fake-riots-281/

Dec 20, 2011 1:53am EST  --  Report as abuse
marisa70394 wrote:
Yes, some Russians are hankering for the return of the Soviet Union, but I actually feel most Russians want a country that is freer and more honest, perhaps closer to a European model of life. After all, Russians are by and large very European minded and less like the Chinese in attitude, though I see things changing there too. I really don’t think any Russian wants to go back to the Soviet Union mentality but they would be happy to have it back in terms of geography, but I don’t see it happening without war since so many satellite countries now like Kazakhstan, Georgia, etc are quite happy having their independence and culture back. I really do see Putin not returning as president unless he imposes a Chinese model of social control on Russia, and that would backfire so badly for Putin that he would wind up in jail. He may wind up in jail anyway, so he might experience that as part of any investigation into his part in the long history of corruption since he took office.

Dec 20, 2011 11:22am EST  --  Report as abuse
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