MEET VERA PUTINA: Vladimir Vladimirovich's real mother?
Written by smoc
Monday, 12 October 2009 19:33
Could this woman be Vladimir Putin's real mother?
The Telegraph, 5 December 2008 Little
is known about the childhood of Russian leader Vladimir Putin, despite
his position as one of the world's most powerful men. Now in an
extraordinary development, a Georgian woman has come forward to say she
is his mother.
Vera Putina, 82, has claimed he is the child
she gave away at the age of ten, giving an account of an unhappy
childhood which is fiercely disputed by the Kremlin:
Vera Putina
lives hand-to-mouth in rural Georgia but displays the famous
hospitality of the people of the Caucuses. Draping a cloth over the
table in her garden, she piles it with fruit, nuts and shot glasses of
chacha – homemade vodka.
Her house sits on a dirt track in the
village of Metekhi, about 12 miles from Gori which was occupied by
Russian tanks this August during the conflict over the breakaway state
of South Ossetia. A tiny woman, with gnarled worker's hands, only Mrs
Putina's strong cheekbones and deep-set, piercing blue eyes are
suggestive of who she claims she is.
"I used to be proud of having a son who became President of Russia. Since the war I am ashamed."
Since
Russian-born Mrs Putina saw Vladimir Putin on the television in 1999,
she has been convinced he is her estranged son. Backed up by other
residents in Metekhi, Mrs Putina claims he lived in the village between
the ages of two-and-a-half and ten before being sent back to his
grandparents in Ochyor, Russia.
Records in the archives of
Metekhi's closest town, Caspi, indicate that a Vladmir Putin was
registered at Metekhi school, 1959-1960, stated nationality: Georgian.
Mrs
Putina's account is at odds with the Kremlin's version of events and
Dmitry Peskov, Mr Putin's spokesman, yesterday dismissed the claims:
"The story is not true. It does not correspond to reality at all."
Mr
Putin's quasi-autobiography "First Person", paid for by his election
campaign in 2000, states he was the sole surviving son of a factory
worker and ex-serviceman of the Soviet Navy, and spent his early years
in a rat-infested communal apartment in St. Petersburg.
Mr Putin
claims his paternal grandfather, Spiridon Putin, had been Vladimir
Lenin's and Joseph Stalin's personal cook and both of his parents died
of cancer, his mother in 1998 and his father in 1999.
But Mrs
Putina's claim to the maternity of the Russian leader highlights how
little is known about the childhood of one of the world's most powerful
men. The published details of his upbringing are strikingly scant. Mrs
Putina's account also brings a personal dimension to the recent war
between Russia and Georgia, and exhumes memories of another Russian
strongman and Georgia's most famous son, Josef Stalin.
In Mrs
Putina's account, Mr Putin's father was a Russian mechanic, Platon
Privalov, who got her pregnant while married to another woman. She
claims her son, nicknamed "Vova" was born on October 7, 1950, exactly
two years before Mr Putin's official birth date.
In 1952, Mrs
Putina married a Georgian soldier, Giorgi Osepahvili, and moved to
Georgia with her son. In December 1960, under pressure from her husband
to disown her child, she delivered "Vova" back to his grandparents in
Russia. Mrs Putina believes that the St. Petersburg-based "parents"
referred to in Mr Putin's biography adopted her son from his
grandparents.
Shura Gabinashvili is a former Russian teacher of
the village school in Metekhi. She claims to have given the child
Russian language classes between 1958 and 1960, and says that she has
received death threats about making the claims public.
She
remembers "Vova" as "an extremely bright child, the brightest in the
class. He loved Russian fables and Russian was his favourite subject.
He also liked fishing and wrestling. He was the shortest child in the
class but he always wanted to win at everything."
Mrs Putina is
diffident about her son's relationship with his stepfather but admits
that "Giorgi was very strong with the children. But Vova was a quiet
child who read a lot and didn't like relationships."
In December
1960, having received an ultimatum from her husband, Mrs Putina
travelled with "Vova" back to Ochyor. After staying one week to tend
her sick mother, she left the boy with her parents and returned to
Georgia. She claims the next time she saw her son was on television in
1999. When asked how she recognised him from the boy she had last seen
aged ten, she says, "Do you think I would not recognise my son?"
Photo-fit
experts in Moscow have been unconvinced that the black and white
photograph Mrs Putina has of her son, aged seven, is the current
Russian Prime Minister.
Mrs Putina's story is also grist for the brilliant PR machine that works within the Georgian government.
Commentators
have accused the small Republic of manipulating the press over its
recent conflict with Russia, with some claiming that while the Russians
may have won the war in August, the Georgians claimed a propaganda
victory.
If Mrs Putina's story is to be believed, the Georgians
can argue that Mr Putin's Georgian link has echoes of Josef Stalin's
upbringing who was raised in Gori and physically abused by his mother's
alcoholic husband.
And while critics of the Iraq war in the US
media have theorised that George W. Bush went to war in Iraq to avenge
the assassination plot on his father's life by Saddam Hussein, the
Georgians could claim that Mr Putin went to war this summer to wipe
clean the slate of his childhood.
But at the very least Mrs
Putina's story identifies the holes in the known story of Mr Putin's
past. The official line is that Mr Putin's parents were already in
their forties when Mr Putin was born, which leaves a gap of over
fifteen years since the births of their previous sons, Oleg and Viktor,
neither of whom survived childhood.
Details of the first ten
years of Mr Putin's life are scarce in his autobiography, especially
when compared with other world leaders.
Despite having appeared
in various European publications since 2000, efforts to get to the
bottom of Mr Putina's story have so far been short-lived. The Russian
journalist and media magnate, Artyom Borovik, was on his way to Kiev
when his private plane crashed. Allegedly, he was on the point of
publishing the story about Mrs Putina.
The Italian journalist,
Antonio Russo, electronically transmitted footage of Mrs Putina to
Italy shortly before he was shot dead near Tbilisi. Neither deaths have
been proved to have any connection with Mrs Putina.
Mrs Putina
states she is no longer willing to talk to journalists on the subject,
but challenges Mr Putin to disprove her story. "I am ready to do a DNA
test if he is."
As
the cold winter months set in, Russia has renewed threats to cut off
gas to Europe if Ukraine begins to illegally siphon supplies.
In a statement on Wednesday, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said that
theft of unpaid energy resources would result in a supply cut for the
rest of the continent, which receives much of its gas through pipelines
crossing Ukrainian territory. “If they pay us for supplies for domestic
consumption, they’ll get them,” he said. “If they don’t pay…they won’t
get them. If they don’t get them, likely, there will be siphoning from
the export pipeline,” in which case the supply would be cut entirely.
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