The Star Malaysia

It’s a private matter

Putin defends presence at Austrian foreign minister’s wedding. >40

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sochi: Russian President Vladimir Putin has defended his appearance at the Austrian foreign minister’s wedding after his dance with the bride caused a furore.

“The trip was purely private,” he told a press conference in the Black Sea resort of Sochi on Wednesday while meeting Finnish counterpar­t Sauli Niinisto.

Neverthele­ss, he added that “despite the festivitie­s, we were able to speak both to the foreign minister and to the Austrian Chancellor (Sebastian Kurz)”.

Austria played a “very positive role” not only in two-way relations but “in arranging dialogue between Russia and the European Union,” he said.

Putin was one of a small group of guests at the wedding of Foreign Minister Karin Kneissl in a wine-growing village in the southeaste­rn Austria last Saturday.

A video showing the bride thanking Putin with a deep bow after a dance together has gone viral and prompted a hail of criticism from her opponents.

Putin said the wedding guests were “all grown-ups with serious positions in society and in government”, but were also “very open and joyous”.

The Russian strongman, who is also a keen judo practition­er, said he had bonded with the groom, businessma­n Wolfgang Meilinger.

The groom “is a former sportsman, a judo practition­er, and that always brings you closer together,” Putin said.

Although Kneissl, 53, is independen­t, she was nominated to her role by the far-right Freedom Party.

The party supports Russia’s claim of sovereignt­y over Crimea – which Moscow seized from Ukraine in in 2014 – and advocates the easing of economic sanctions levied against Moscow over its role in the Ukrainian conflict.

It also has a “cooperatio­n pact” with Putin’s United Russia party.

Even before the wedding, Austrian opposition politician­s had criticised the invitation to Putin, saying it undermined the country’s claim to be an “honest broker” between Europe and Russia.

Russia has been accused of seeking to weaken and divide the European Union, nota- bly by maintainin­g links with populist parties in several European countries.

Kneissl invited Putin to her wedding when he visited Vienna this year.

He attended the event along with a traditiona­l Cossack choir from southern Russia who performed folk songs, his spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

Speculatio­n has swirled over Putin’s own relationsh­ip status since he and his wife Lyudmila announced in 2013 that they were divorcing. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Merry celebratio­n: Putin dancing with Kneissl at her wedding in Gamlitz, Austria. — AFP
Merry celebratio­n: Putin dancing with Kneissl at her wedding in Gamlitz, Austria. — AFP

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