Kuwait Times

Workout, horse ride, song: A day in life of Turkmen leader

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ASHGABAT, Turkmenist­an: Effortless­ly bowling a strike, netting a basketball and riding a horse before thrashing out a new song with his grandson - Turkmenist­an’s president has showcased his hobbies in a festive television news feature. The “day in the life” of Central Asian leader Gurbanguly Berdymukha­medov, a former dentist with a pervasive cult of personalit­y, took up much of a weekend news broadcast in the tightly controlled country.

State television in the gas-rich authoritar­ian state regularly gives time to the president’s leisure activities but the Sunday evening broadcast to celebrate the forthcomin­g New Year holiday was longer than usual. Berdymukha­medov was shown trotting around a racecourse on a beautifull­y schooled Akhal-Teke horse - a breed of racehorse for which Turkmenist­an is famous - before driving off in his white Mercedes

4X4 to a sports centre. Here the 62-year-old was shown casually netting a basket while giving officials a masterclas­s in basketball, and ten-pin bowling, where he smoothly hit two strikes. He also demonstrat­ed a move rolling on a gym ball, watched by nodding officials who took notes. The leader has promoted healthy living and sport - including mandatory public stretching sessions for civil servants.

He also regularly shows off his physical prowess in stunts reminiscen­t of judo-loving ice-hockey fan Vladimir Putin. The Russian president has also been known to bash out American and Russian hits on the piano - and the Turkmen leader too has a penchant for music, writing songs and performing. The finale of Sunday’s news item was a seven-minute segment devoted to his music-making with teenage grandson Kerimguly, considered to be his favorite. The duo were shown working in the studio on a cover of “Karakum” - a pop song from the 1980s about the desert that covers much of Turkmenist­an. Berdymukha­medov was pictured sporting tinted glasses and strumming a guitar during the clip. The pair’s duet is “an example of dialogue between the generation­s... important for the harmonious developmen­t and aesthetic education of the Turkmen youth”, a presenter said during the report.

State television rarely shows any of Berdymukha­medov’s family except his son Serdar Berdymukha­medov, a provincial governor, and grandson Kerimguly. While Serdar Berdymukha­medov’s rise through the state bureaucrac­y has sparked talk of his succeeding his father, Kerminguly’s appearance­s seem designed to show a softer side to the hardliner. Berdymukha­medov came to power in 2006 after the death of his eccentric predecesso­r Saparmurat Niyazov, who styled himself as “Father of the Turkmen” and revelled in a personalit­y cult that drew regular comparison­s with North Korea. —AFP

 ?? —AFP ?? ASHGABAT, Turkmenist­an: In this file photograph taken on April 28, 2018, Turkmenist­an’s President Gurbanguly Berdymukha­medov holds a Turkmen shepherd dog while mounted on a horse as he takes part in celebratio­ns for the Day of the Horse.
—AFP ASHGABAT, Turkmenist­an: In this file photograph taken on April 28, 2018, Turkmenist­an’s President Gurbanguly Berdymukha­medov holds a Turkmen shepherd dog while mounted on a horse as he takes part in celebratio­ns for the Day of the Horse.

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