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Putin sworn in as Russian president

Agence France-Presse

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Vladimir Putin gets a third mandate as Russian president after a short break from the office

BACK IN POWER. Russian President Vladimir Putin walks past guests during his inauguration at The Kremlin in Moscow, May 7, 2012. Photo courtesy of the official website of the Russian presidency.

MOSCOW, Russia – Vladimir Putin on Monday, May 7, took his oath of office to become Russia’s president for a historic third mandate at a glittering ceremony inside the Kremlin.

Placing his hand on a copy of the constitution, Putin swore to “respect and protect the rights and freedoms of the people” and defend Russia’s security as he officially took over from outgoing president Dmitry Medvedev.

“I swear as President of the Russian Federation to respect and protect the rights and freedoms of the people and citizens, observe and protect the constitution of the Russian Federation,” he read.

In his oath, he pledged to “defend the sovereignty and independence and the security and integrity of the state and to faithfully serve the people.”

Yet activists accuse Putin of having sacrificed rights in the pursuit of stability throughout his 12-year domination of Russia and fear he will crack down on the nascent protest movement in his new six-year term.

The ceremony took place in the Hall of the Order of St. Andrew in the Grand Kremlin Palace in front of a specially invited audience of the Russian elite including his rarely-seen wife Lyudmila.

Putin already served as president for two terms between 2000 and 2008 but ceded the Kremlin to Medvedev four years ago after serving the maximum two mandates allowed.

Medvedev, widely mocked as a seat-warmer for the real Russian number one who failed to implement real change, is expected later in the week to take on Putin’s last job as prime minister.

Despite winning March 4 presidential elections with 63.6 percent of the vote, analysts say Putin now faces unprecedented challenges in his third Kremlin term after mass opposition protests and an explosion in Internet use.

Under Medvedev’s presidency, the presidential mandate was extended to six years from four. If Putin stays in power the full term to 2018, he will equal Soviet leader Leonid Brezhenv as the longest serving Moscow leader since Stalin. – Agence France-Presse

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