Putin divorce gets sympathetic reaction in Russian media - Action News
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Putin divorce gets sympathetic reaction in Russian media

Russian media from all sides of the political spectrum have reacted with unusual compassion to the announcement of President Vladimir Putin's divorce.

Vladimir Putin and wife Lyudmila separate less than 2 months before 30th anniversary

Vladimir Putin (L) and his wife Lyudmila attend a service, conducted by Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Kirill, to mark the start of his term as Russia's new president at the Kremlin in Moscow, May 7, 2012. Vladimir Putin took the oath as Russia's president on Monday with a ringing appeal for unity at the start of a six-year term in which he faces growing dissent, economic problems and bitter political rivalries. (Aleksey Nikolskyi/RIA Novosti/Reuters)

Russian media from all sides of the political spectrum have reacted with unusual compassion to the announcement of President Vladimir Putins divorce.

Putin, 60, and his 55-year-old wife, Lyudmila, announced the end of their marriageless than two months shy of their 30th anniversary in an interview Thursday with Russian television.

His spokesman Dmitry Peskov could not say when they would formally divorce, adding that this did not matter.

Divorce is common in Russia. Nearly 700,000 Russian couples dissolved their marriages in 2009, according to UNICEF. But Russian leaders, unlike their American counterparts, generally keep their domestic lives well out of public view and divorce among top officials in Russia is unprecedented.

Lyudmila Putina was rarely seen in public during her husbands long tenure at the top of Russian politics, fueling rumours that she and Putin had already separated.

'The president and his wife acted like real people.' Viktor Loshak, columnist

While breakups involving prominent Russian politicians are exceptionally rare, some sections of the media often sneer at celebrity splits.

Unexpected reaction

Russian media, however, were unusually compassionate about the Putins decision.

Opposition-leaning Kommersant Radio lauded the couple for keeping the public informed instead of keeping the divorce a secret.

"Perhaps a lot of people feel better now that the president did what he did instead of living a double life for the sake of following some false protocol," prominent columnist Viktor Loshak said on Kommersant FM Friday morning. "The president and his wife acted like real people."

One of Russias bestselling tabloids, Moskovsky Komsomolets, credited the president with breaking a long-held taboo about talking about his private life, let alone any problems.

"There was hardly any politics-savvy Russian in the country who could not have guessed that the first couple wasnt particularly intimate. Lyudmila Putinas long-time absence at political events was telling," writer Mikhail Rostovsky said. "Putin has broken a taboo by showing that he is a man like everyone else. Even the president is entitled have a private life and entitled to have failures in it, too."

There was no comment on state-run media about the prospect of a second marriage for Putin or another woman in his life.

In a Friday interview with the opposition Ekho Moskvy radio, Peskov, his spokesman, said there is no other woman in Putins life, responding to rumours years ago that Putin was going to marry a gymnast half his age.

"Look at Putins work schedule," Peskov said. "You will see that there is no place for family affairs in his life, which is probably unfortunate. Its only about the duties and responsibility that he has as head of the state."

The Putins married on July 28, 1983, and have two adult daughters, Maria and Yekaterina, who havent been seen in public for years.

There had been hints that Lyudmila Putina was unhappy. In a 2005 interview with three Russian newspapers, she complained that her husband worked long hours, forgetting that "one needs not only to work, but also to live."