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A Russian woman plays with her baby while watching the televised call-in show with President Vladimir Putin in Moscow.
A Russian woman plays with her baby while watching the televised call-in show with President Vladimir Putin in Moscow.

Live Blog: Putin's Call-In Show

-- After 3 hours and 40 minutes, it's over.

-- Economic questions dominated the early portion of Russian President Vladimir Putin's annual televised question-and-answer session, followed by queries about Russia's foreign relations with countries such as Turkey, Ukraine, and Syria.

-- One of the first questions put to Putin concerned rising prices for groceries and other necessities. Putin said that he understands that people are being hurt by inflation.

-- Putin was asked -- reportedly by a 12-year-old girl -- who he would save from drowning first: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan or Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, the leaders of two countries with which Russia currently has badly strained relations.

09:14 14.4.2016

Q: Everyone in Russia is saving. What do you save?

A: Time.

09:13 14.4.2016

Putin agrees. Last year prices rose by about 14 percent, this year -- by 2.2 percent. But that’s the consequence of import substitution, which in the end only benefits Russian farmers. Eventually, when the market is full of local produce, the prices will go down, Putin says.

09:10 14.4.2016
09:08 14.4.2016

After taking a tour around the call center and answering the first question, Putin takes his seat. The room greets him with a standing ovation.

09:06 14.4.2016

Putin takes the first question from a woman from Omsk, complaining about the state of the roads in the city.


There are a lot of questions about roads from many Russian regions, Putin says.

09:02 14.4.2016

Russian President Vladimir Putin has entered Moscow Gostiny Dvor.

08:54 14.4.2016

More than 2 million questions have already been submitted.

08:50 14.4.2016

For the first time, Russian citizens can ask the president questions through the VK social network. After filling out a questionnaire, an image of winking Vladimir Putin appears to let you know that the question has been successfully submitted.

08:46 14.4.2016

Top three questions from last year, according to the Russia-24 state TV channel:

16 percent -- questions about housing and communal services

10 percent -- questions about human and citizen rights

9 percent -- questions about the state, society, and politics

Overall, 8.5 million people watched the “Direct Line” with Vladimir Putin last year.

08:37 14.4.2016

Inside Moscow Gostiny Dvor, where the call-in is taking place.

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