DayFR Euro

Merkel’s memoirs: Putin apologizes for dog incident

Reaction to memoirs

Putin apologizes to Merkel for dog incident

The German Chancellor is afraid of dogs. Nevertheless, Putin let his Labrador sniff them.

Published: November 28, 2024, 7:39 p.m

Subscribe now and benefit from the read-aloud function.

BotTalk

Russian President Vladimir Putin has apologized to former German Chancellor Angela Merkel (CDU) for an incident in 2007 when he brought a dog to a meeting despite the Chancellor’s corresponding phobia. He didn’t know that “she’s afraid of dogs,” Putin assured on Thursday, referring to a passage in the recently published Merkel’s memoirs was addressed. “If I had known, I would never have done this,” affirmed the Russian president.

When the two met in Sochi, southern Russia, 17 years ago, Putin suddenly let his black Labrador into the room. The dog named “Koni” ran up to the then Chancellor to sniff her. A famous photo from the meeting shows the large black dog in the middle of the room. In the picture, Merkel, who was once bitten by a dog, looks at the animal with a worried expression, while Putin watches the scene with a smile.

In her memoirs, Merkel writes that Putin “took pleasure in the situation” and may have wanted to demonstrate his power or see her in distress. Merkel emphasized that the Russian President knew very well that she was afraid of dogs.

Putin assured on Thursday that he wanted to create a “relaxed and pleasant atmosphere”. “I turn to her again: Angela, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to cause you any distress,” the president said.

Putin is known to be an animal lover. Knowing this, Merkel’s team expressly asked the Kremlin that Putin not bring his dog to their meetings, the former head of government explained. Accordingly, Putin respected this wish at their very first meeting in Moscow in 2006. Instead, he gave her a gift: a black and white stuffed dog. Putin told her that he wouldn’t bite and she put a “good face on the evil game,” Merkel wrote.

Newsletter

Under suspicion

Get the background information on current court cases that are affecting Switzerland.

More newsletters

Log in

AFP/jaw

Found an error? Report now.

7 comments

-

Related News :