MOSCOW - A Russian government agency has registered the web address Putin-2012.rf in a sign that Prime Minister Vladimir Putin may run in the next presidential election, an Internet news agency reported. Russia's Federal Bodyguard Service, tasked with protecting high-ranking officials, registered several Cyrillic-script web addresses that appear to link Putin to a run in the 2012 election, the Gazeta.ru web news site reported.
Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin gestures during a video conference on the forest fires in Moscow Sept 16, 2010. [Agencies] |
None of the more than 400 web addresses registered by the agency since Cyrillic addresses became available earlier this summer link President Dmitry Medvedev to the 2012 vote, according to the report.
Putin's chief spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said that the web address was not an indication that the prime minister was planning a return to the Kremlin.
"There was no request from our side," Peskov told Gazeta.ru. "One should not make conclusions about far-off elections on the basis of domain name registrations."
Putin is widely regarded as Russia's paramount leader. Putin was president in 2000-08, and Medvedev was Putin's handpicked choice to succeed him in the Kremlin.