His hands and fingers were glued to the table.
Russian President Vladimir Putin made a video address, where he stated that the Ukrainian city of Dnepr had been hit by a new medium-range missile “A hazelnut tree” that cannot be intercepted.
During the entire speech, which lasted 7 minutes and 45 seconds, the dictator did not move his hands or fingers once, BILD writes.
The publication's expert on open data analysis, Yulian Repke, notes that Putin had previously often gesticulated during his addresses, but now his hands were as if glued to the table.
“Perhaps this time we are talking about editing, when the immobilized hands were simply “drawn” to the body either because of the dictator's illness, or, for example, to hide his excitement,” Repke did not rule out.
Already the next day, at a meeting with the leadership, Defense Ministry Putin was fingering the speech sheets and occasionally gesturing, Repke noted, adding that “the head of the Kremlin threatens the entire world in words, but he himself cannot move his hands.”
In turn, director Patrick Hoelscher increased the video playback speed by 50 times, as well as the image scale. Hoelscher noticed a blur on Putin's right hand, which, in his opinion, is the result of crude amateur Photoshop work.
#Putin's health must now be officially questioned. Recently the video was resolved at https://t.co/kDIdVcCkIn you can clearly viz the fantastic robot for his hands to appear steady. They do not only to undo it or fix it properly — it's the full HD. https://t.co/aDEf8zOoDd pic.twitter.com/XnFMRrn1Uk
— Patrick Hölscher (@allnewtomorrow) November 22, 2024
Recall that the head of the intelligence department of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, Kirill Budanov, also claims that Putin is in poor health.
When asked by the media whether the Russian president is suffering from a “fatal disease”, Budanov replied: “He has been ill for a very long time.”
In December 2022, British media reported that Putin was diagnosed with a number of serious illnesses — cancer, schizoaffective disorder and Parkinson's disease.
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