Los Angeles Times

‘Uncle Volodya’ Putin grants their wishes

Russian leader has helped many callers to his live TV show. Others aren’t so lucky.

- BY SABRA AYRES sabra.ayres@latimes.com Twitter: @sabraayres Ayres is a special correspond­ent.

MOSCOW — Vladimir Vladimirov­ich, the questioner wondered, what is the best advice you could give your grandchild­ren?

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who only last year confirmed that he has grandchild­ren at all, considered the question and responded during a nationally broadcast call-in program. “Don’t lie,” he said — a rather stunning response for a former KGB officer who has told whopping untruths about, for instance, the existence of Russian troops in Ukraine.

But you never know what you’re going to hear on “Direct Line With Putin.”

Thursday marked the 16th year for the annually televised event, in which Putin took more than four hours of calls and texts from Russians across the country. The live format allows Russians to reach out to their president with what appear to be previously vetted questions.

This year’s show lasted 4 hours, 23 minutes. The Kremlin said it received more than 2.5 million questions, of which Putin answered 79 during the live event.

The show is perhaps best known for giving Putin an opportunit­y to play a cross between the tooth fairy and Ann Landers, giving out sage advice and almost magically solving problems great and (mostly) small.

This year’s live show had a slightly different format. Russian media had reported days earlier that regional governors, ministers and deputies had been put on notice to be ready to be speak on some of the questions coming in live via video calls. Several times, cameras flashed to video screens of governors and ministers as Putin put callers’ questions to them about a wide range of topics, including gas prices, the closing of rural medical clinics and low salaries of state workers.

Now in his 18th year of being either president or prime minister, Putin seemed to strike a more serious tone than in previous years. He addressed Russia’s involvemen­t in Syria, saying that the military has ceased “large-scale military actions” in the conf lict but that its troops will remain “as long as it’s in Russia’s interests.”

Putin said accusation­s that the Kremlin tried to meddle in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election could be described only as “a joke.” The Kremlin has repeatedly denied that it had anything to do with disinforma­tion campaigns or other ways of influencin­g the election’s outcome.

As in the past, sometimes the questions weren’t questions at all. Early in the show, a reporter from the state channel stood at a fan zone overlookin­g Luzhniki Stadium, where the final championsh­ip soccer game will be played for the FIFA World Cup, which starts here next week. The reporter turned to Russian soccer legendturn­ed-lawmaker Valery Gazzaev, who began a monologue about how important it was to invest in and develop Russia’s soccer program.

The moderator interrupte­d Gazzaev: “Yes, but what is your question?”

“My question? I want to wish you good health, Vladimir Vladimirov­ich. And don’t forget about soccer.”

But Putin’s focus this year, as it had been in previous years, was on portraying himself as a hands-on father of the nation and, sometimes, the maker of dreams.

Here’s a sample of some of Putin’s more unusual “Direct Line” questions and their outcomes over the last 16 years.

The dress

Dasha Varfolomey­eva called from Buryatia, a republic in eastern Siberia, during the December 2008 “Direct Line” to tell Putin about her and her sister’s struggles to afford the clothes of their dreams while trying to survive on their grandmothe­r’s small pension.

“Uncle Volodya!” the 8year-old began, addressing Putin by a diminutive name for Vladimir typically used by close friends or family members. “It will be New Year’s soon. We live on my grandmothe­r’s pension; there is no work in the village. My sister and I dream of new dresses. I want to ask you for a dress, one like Cinderella. Please be our good wizard this new year!”

Putin, who was then prime minister, replied by inviting the girl and her family to Moscow, about 2,700 miles west of her village. As for the new dresses: “Come to the main Christmas tree in Moscow, and we will deal with the gift,” Putin told the girl.

Reached by a reporter from Komsomolsk­aya Pravda the next day, the girl’s school principal said Dasha’s call with Putin was “a truly grandiose event” for the village.

Two weeks later, Dasha and her family visited Putin at his house outside Moscow, where he presented the girl with a new dress.

The dog

During the 2015 “Direct Line,” the presenter read Putin a letter from a woman whose close friend was about to turn 40 and wanted a dog for her birthday. Her friends had said they were ready to get her a dog, but her husband was against it, the woman wrote. Could Putin, who was prime minister at the time, use his influence to persuade the husband, Boris, to allow her friend to have a dog? “Tell Boris he’s wrong!” the woman wrote.

“We can together work out a plan of action and ask to meet his wife halfway,” Putin said. “I am sure that after that he will give her not only a dog, but an elephant, especially if she says that at the right time and right place. And he may in addition promise her a fur coat.”

A week later, the state television channel ran a report showing the friend with a puppy, a corgi she said was just as she had wished. Boris had capitulate­d to Putin’s persuasion, the report said.

Flood damage

Dresses and dogs aside, Putin does try to address serious questions about the country’s economic woes and infrastruc­ture problems. In 2017, a video report aired on “Direct Line” showed a reporter interviewi­ng Valentina Sakovskaya, a mother of three whose home was nearly destroyed by floods in the southern region of Stavropol that spring.

Sakovskaya complained to Putin that the local authoritie­s had done nothing to assist her or other residents of the village, and her home remained uninhabita­ble.

Within days, Sakovskaya received government financial assistance, first for 120,000 rubles, or $1,930. More money began trickling in from various government assistance funds. In total, the family received about $30,000 within a year.

“We bought a house,” she told the newspaper RBC.

This year, another woman from the same region called in to complain that she had still not received any help from the same flooding. Putin referred the issue to the regional governor, who looked nervously at the camera as he promised to address the issue.

Trash dumps

The residents of Kuchino in the Moscow region complained together to Putin last year about the toxic smell coming from the nearby landfill, which served the city of Moscow and was polluting the air of the surroundin­g towns.

Putin promised to close the landfill within the month. He kept his promise. Within six months, residents living near a huge landfill in the Volokolams­k region were demanding the same outcome. That landfill remains open despite several rounds of protests that have ended with detentions and arrests of activists demanding its closure.

 ?? MIKHAIL KLIMENTYEV Pool Photo ?? OVER 16 YEARS on his annual “Direct Line With Putin” show, Vladimir Putin has given out advice and almost magically solved problems big and small.
MIKHAIL KLIMENTYEV Pool Photo OVER 16 YEARS on his annual “Direct Line With Putin” show, Vladimir Putin has given out advice and almost magically solved problems big and small.

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