Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

OLIGARCH: PUTIN IS TERMINALLY ILL

» Despot ‘has blood cancer’ » Bloated face sign he’s sick

- BY TOM PARRY Special Correspond­ent President Putin’s face appears to be puffy tom.parry@mirror.co.uk @Parrytom

A LEAKED conversati­on between an oligarch close to the Kremlin and a contact in the West suggests Vladimir Putin is terminally ill.

In the secretly taped recording, the close confidant describes the 69-yearold Russian president as being “very ill with blood cancer”.

It comes after months of speculatio­n about tyrant Putin’s health following the invasion of Ukraine in February.

His face has become visibly puffy compared to how it looked last year, which some experts say is the result of steroids being taken for a serious illness.

Putin’s hardman gait has also changed radically.

On Wednesday he missed an annual ice hockey match in Moscow, in which he normally plays the starring role.

Most noticeably of all, recent footage inside the Kremlin shows him with severely shaking hands, and clutching at the side of a table as though to steady himself.

At the start of the invasion, when Western leaders like French President Emmanuel Macron tried to persuade Putin to halt his brutal war, he sat far apart from his visitors at the other end of a long table.

Insiders claim he is paranoid about picking up infections after self-isolation at the height of the pandemic.

Meanwhile a “top-secret memo” sent out by the headquarte­rs of the FSB – Russia’s domestic security agency – in

WEDNESDAY

March to regional directors instructed them not to listen to rumours about the President’s terminal condition.

The document, however, is thought to have had the reverse effect, confirming widely held suspicions.

Ashley Grossman, a professor of endocrinol­ogy at Oxford University, told US magazine New Lines: “Putin has always been a very fit-looking man with a slightly gaunt appearance.

“But over the last couple of years, he seems to have filled out in the face and neck. Cushingoid appearance, it’s called, and it’s compatible with steroid use.”

Yesterday a Russian soldier accused of killing an unarmed Ukrainian civilian appeared in court in Kyiv, ahead of the first war crimes trial since the start of the conflict.

Vadim Shishimari­n, 21, faced a preliminar­y hearing, accused of killing an unarmed 62-year-old man.

Shishimari­n, who confirmed that he was a Russian serviceman, faces possible life imprisonme­nt if he is found guilty of charges of war crimes and premeditat­ed murder.

It comes as further details emerged of Russia’s disastrous attempt to cross a river in eastern Ukraine.

One military expert said he now believes up to 180 Russian soldiers were killed, and 80 vehicles were destroyed by defending Ukrainian forces.

Meanwhile, concerns are growing about the impact of Russia hoarding grain in captured areas of eastern Ukraine. The seizure of regions which produce much of the grain Ukraine exports could have a major impact on global distributi­on.

Half of wheat cultivatio­n land designated for winter is located in areas of intense fighting or are occupied by the Russian military.

He seems to have filled out in the face and neck. This is compatible with steroid use ASHLEY GROSSMAN OXFORD UNIVERSITY ENDOCRINOL­OGIST

 ?? ?? BLOWN APART Woman eyes the remains of Mariupol
BLOWN APART Woman eyes the remains of Mariupol

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