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Putin offers Comey political asylum in acerbic remarks

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MOSCOW: In a sarcastic outburst, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday scoffed at former FBI director James Comey’s disclosure of his conversati­ons with President Donald Trump, saying the move has made Comey eligible for political asylum in Russia.

Putin, speaking in a live callin show that lasted four hours, likened Comey to NSA contractor Edward Snowden, who has been living in Russia since being granted asylum in 2013.

“It looks weird when the chief of a security agency records his conversati­on with the commander-in-chief and then hands it over to media via his friend,” Putin said. “What’s the difference then between the FBI director and Mr. Snowden? In that case, he’s more of a rights campaigner defending a certain position than the security agency chief.”

On an acerbic note, he added that if Comey “faces some sort of persecutio­n in connection with that, we are ready to offer political asylum in Russia to him as well.”

The remarks reflected Putin’s annoyance with the congressio­nal and FBI investigat­ions into links between Trump campaign officials and Russia, which have haunted the White House, shattering Moscow’s hopes for improving ties with Washington.

The Russian president reaffirmed his denial of meddling in the US election, saying that Russia has openly expressed its views and has not engaged in any covert activities.

He also attempted to turn the tables on the US, saying it has sought to influence Russian elections by funding NGOs as part of its aspiration­s for global domination.

“Turn a globe and point your finger anywhere, you will find American interests and interferen­ce there,” he said.

On a conciliato­ry note, Putin added that Russia still hopes for normalizat­ion of ties with the US.

He said Moscow and Washington could cooperate in efforts to prevent the proliferat­ion of weapons of mass destructio­n and pool efforts to tackle the North Korean nuclear and missile problem.

He said the two countries could also cooperate in dealing with global poverty and efforts to prevent climate change, adding that Moscow also hopes that the US could play a “constructi­ve role” in helping settle the Ukrainian crisis.

During a tightly choreograp­hed marathon TV show, an annual affair that lasts hours, Putin said that Russia has climbed out of recession despite continuing Western sanctions, adding that the restrictio­ns have forced the country to “switch on our brains” to reduce dependence on energy exports.

He deplored the US Senate’s decision Wednesday to impose new sanctions on Russia as a reflection of Western efforts to “contain” Russia, but insisted that the measures have only made the country stronger.

The Republican-led Senate voted Wednesday to punish Moscow for interferin­g in the 2016 election by approving a wide-ranging package of sanctions that target key sectors of Russia’s economy and individual­s who carried out cyberattac­ks.

The Senate bill follows up on several rounds of other sanctions imposed by the US and the EU over Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and its support for pro-Russia insurgents in eastern Ukraine.

Putin argued that Russia has done nothing to warrant the Senate’s move, calling it an “evidence of a continuing internal political struggle in the US“

The Russian leader claimed that the “crisis is over,” pointing at modest economic growth over the past nine months, low inflation and rising currency reserves.

He recognized, however, that people’s incomes have fallen and 13.5 percent of Russians now live below the poverty line, currently equivalent to $170 per month.

Most of the questions during the show were about low salaries, decrepit housing, potholed roads, failing health care and other social problems.

 ??  ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures as he speaks to journalist­s following a live nationwide broadcast callin in Moscow on Thursday. (Reuters)
Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures as he speaks to journalist­s following a live nationwide broadcast callin in Moscow on Thursday. (Reuters)

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