Saskatoon StarPhoenix

PUTIN, POMP AND PROCESSION­S

RUSSIAN LEADER INAUGURATE­D FOR 4TH TIME

- ANTON TROIANOVSK­I AND AMIE FERRIS-ROTMAN IN MOSCOW

President Vladimir Putin, already the longest serving leader of Russia since Stalin, launched into a fourth presidenti­al term on Monday promising to focus on improving Russians’ lives at home but without backing down in his confrontat­ion with the West.

Putin, in a brief inaugural address to thousands of invited guests at the Kremlin, emphasized the work he has to do at home, nodding to the long-term challenges Russia faces with a stagnant economy and a declining birth rate. He said Russia needed to expand freedoms for entreprene­urs and scientists, to invest in regional developmen­t, and to raise the quality of education and health care. A particular focus on “traditiona­l family values,” he said, would ensure as many births as possible.

“Russia is a strong, active, and influentia­l participan­t in internatio­nal life,” Putin said. “But now we must use all the means we have at our disposal to, first, resolve domestic, most vital challenges of developmen­t.”

Putin was re-elected in March with 77 per cent of the vote, giving him a clear mandate despite allegation­s of ballot-stuffing in some regions.

Alexei Navalny, the opposition leader and his most outspoken critic, was barred from running over a politicize­d embezzleme­nt conviction.

On Saturday, thousands demonstrat­ed against the president under the slogan “he’s not our tsar.” Police detained Navalny and some 1,600 other protesters, according to OVD Info, the independen­t monitor.

As are many of Putin’s events, Monday’s inaugurati­on was meticulous­ly choreograp­hed for a television audience.

Before his speech, the 65-yearold leader arose from his office desk, donned a suit jacket and walked, for considerab­le time and with signature swagger, down the red-lined Kremlin halls to a Russian-made limousine, state television showed. Putin then took the oath of office in the resplenden­t pink marble Andreyevsk­y Hall, the throne room of Russia’s czars in the Grand Kremlin Palace. The lavish ceremony was full of pomp and splendour, featuring cavalry in brocaded livery and simultaneo­us cannonfire.

In an apparent bid to show the breadth of Putin’s popularity, activists and volunteers from Putin’s reelection campaign joined official dignitarie­s among the 6,000 guests. Also attending was American action star Steven Seagal, whom Putin presented with a Russian passport in 2016, and the leather-clad leader of a pro-Kremlin motorcycle club who is known as “The Surgeon.”

Former German chancellor Gerhard Schroeder also came, prominentl­y standing on the front row besides Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Orthodox Church, and Dmitry Medvedev, who served as prime minister in the last term and has been nominated for a new term.

“The purpose of my life will be, as before, service to the people, to our fatherland,” Putin said after he swore on Russia’s constituti­on.

Under the constituti­on, this six-year term is supposed to be Putin’s last, but speculatio­n has mounted in Moscow that he will seek to hold on to power in some way after 2024, perhaps by taking on a new, leader-of-the-nation role.

For now, Putin’s dominance of the nation’s political system seems ironclad. His popularity surged after he annexed the territory of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, and many Russians have accepted his call to unite around the Kremlin amid the confrontat­ion with the West. To his supporters, western sanctions and accusation­s of Putin’s complicity in U.S. election interferen­ce or Olympic doping are simply means of keeping their country down.

In his patriotic inaugurati­on speech, Putin focused entirely on Russia, but hinted at the standoff with the West when he said, “The country’s security and defence capabiliti­es are reliably ensured. We will continue giving these issues the constant attention they need.”

And while Putin’s foreignpol­icy legacy after nearly two decades in power reflects a rise in Russia’s geopolitic­al ambitions that many Russians support, his accomplish­ments at home are less clear cut. Putin benefited from rising oil prices early in his tenure, but since 2008, Russia’s stagnant economy has grown at an average of just over one per cent a year.

Showcasing Russia’s manufactur­ing potential, Putin swapped his armoured Mercedes-Benz for the domestical­ly made Cortege on Monday. Officials and analysts took to Russian state television to praise the car, hailing the automobile’s entrance on the market as an achievemen­t for the Russian people.

In his state-of-the-nation address in March, Putin promised to halve the poverty rate over the next six years and to double government spending on roads, health care and regional developmen­t.

Until now, Putin’s promises to improve Russians’ lives at home have been overshadow­ed by conflict with the West — with everything from nuclear sabre rattling to the poisoning of a former Russian spy in England for which Britain blames the Kremlin. There are some signs that Russians are growing impatient with slow economic growth and public corruption. Protests in the aftermath of a Siberian mall fire that killed 60 led to the resignatio­n of a regional governor in April.

 ?? ALEXEI NIKOLSKY / SPUTNIK / KREMLIN POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a service held by Russian Orthodox Patriarch Krill, right, after his inaugurati­on ceremony in the Kremlin Monday.
ALEXEI NIKOLSKY / SPUTNIK / KREMLIN POOL PHOTO VIA AP Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a service held by Russian Orthodox Patriarch Krill, right, after his inaugurati­on ceremony in the Kremlin Monday.

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