Russian State TV Claims To Have Footage Of Vladimir Putin Amid Health Rumors

Russian State TV Claims To Have Footage Of Vladimir Putin Amid Health Rumors
MOSCOW, RUSSIA - MARCH 05: Russian President Vladimir Putin holds a joint press conference with Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi during his two-day visit to Russia, at the Kremlin on March 5, 2015 in Moscow, Russia. Renzi visited the murder site of opposition leader Boris Nemtsov before meeting Purin. (Photo by Sasha Mordovets/Getty Images)
MOSCOW, RUSSIA - MARCH 05: Russian President Vladimir Putin holds a joint press conference with Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi during his two-day visit to Russia, at the Kremlin on March 5, 2015 in Moscow, Russia. Renzi visited the murder site of opposition leader Boris Nemtsov before meeting Purin. (Photo by Sasha Mordovets/Getty Images)

MOSCOW, March 13 (Reuters) - Russian state television aired what it said was footage of President Vladimir Putin working at his residence outside Moscow on Friday, a first appearance since he dropped out of sight days ago, triggering rumors he was ill or sidelined by internal conflict.

In the footage, Putin was shown in his office at his Novo-Ogaryovo residence, where he conducts many of his meetings, sitting across a table from Supreme Court head Vyacheslav Lebedev and talking about plans to reform the judicial system.

Dressed in grey suit and a blue patterned tie, he looked in no way different from usual. In the brief footage, he was shown nodding and smiling as Lebedev spoke and could be heard saying a few words about the court system.

A visit by Putin to the Kazakh capital, which was to have taken plan this week, was canceled with no official explanation, while a meeting in Moscow with a delegation from the Georgian separatist region of South Ossetia was also called off.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Reuters on Thursday that Putin, who is 62, was in good health and was working as usual.

However, the cancellation of engagements sparked feverish speculation on Russian social media - though most mainstream organizations, which are deferential to the Kremlin, steered clear of the issue.

The rumors fed into an atmosphere among Moscow's political classes that was already more than usually febrile because of the conflict in Ukraine, and the Feb. 27 killing of opposition figure Boris Nemtsov.

There was no hard evidence that Putin was ill, or that there was any crisis inside the Kremlin. Markets were unruffled by the rumors. The rouble strengthened slightly on Monday, after the central bank cut rates by one percentage point, slightly less than some analysts had expected. (Reporting by Christian Lowe; Editing by Jack Stubbs and Ralph Boulton)

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