Please enable JavaScript to read this content.
-Adapted from Daily Mail
Russian President Vladimir Putin and his wife, Lyudmila, have announced today that they have separated and their marriage is over.
The 60-year-old and his 55-year-old wife broke the news of the end of the 29-year marriage on television.
Asked on Rossiya-24 television about longstanding rumours that they no longer lived together, the 60-year-old Putin said: 'That is true.'
Lyudmila Putin said it had been a 'our common decision. And our marriage is over due to the fact that we barely see each other.'
Asked whether they were divorced, Lyudmila said it was a 'civilised divorce'.
But neither clarified whether they were legally divorced and Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said he did not know.
The couple had last been seen in public together at Putin's inauguration to his third presidential term on May 7, 2012.
Married just a few weeks short of 30 years, the Putins announced the decision on state television after attending a ballet performance Thursday evening in the Kremlin.
His wife has rarely been seen in public during her husband's long tenure at the top of Russian politics.
'I don't like publicity and flying is difficult for me,' she said.
In the televised announcement of their divorce, Putin appeared reserved and Lyudmila smiled tentatively.
'We practically never saw each other. To each his own life,' Putin said.
Lyudmila Putin said, 'We will eternally be very close people. I'm thankful ... that he supports me.'
There were no immediate indications of how the move would be perceived by the public. Divorce is common in Russia, and nearly 700,000 pairs dissolved their marriages in 2009, according to UNICEF.
Stay informed. Subscribe to our newsletter
Russian leaders, unlike their counterparts in the West, generally keep their personal lives well out of public view. Mikhail Gorbachev's wife Raisa raised many Russians' hackles by her visibility, flair for fashionable dress and forthright comments.
But Putin also has made a point of supporting traditional social values and appearing at holiday masses of the Orthodox Church.
The church permits divorce under some circumstances; it is not clear if the Putins sought pastoral advice or permission before the split.
The pair, who married in 1983 and have two daughters, recently attracted attention after they were never seen in public together.
An official family portrait has been issued, and photographs of their daughters Maria, 27, and Yekaterina, 26, have never been printed by the Russian media.
In April speculation was mounting as to why the first lady of Russia was rarely seen by the president's side.
Unfounded rumours suggested the president had an affair with spy-turned-lingerie model Anna Chapman, which has been strongly denied, was behind the former Aeroflot-hostess' disappearance from public view.
Other rumours said that he was still conducting a relationship former Olympic gold medallist Alina Kabayeva - another claim that was also heavily rebutted.
The couple's relationship has faced scrutiny in the past.
In October 2010 the pair tried to quell rumours they had divorced by posing for pictures as they jointly answered questions for the national census.
The high-profile politician has been a constant fixture in leading the country.
He was re-elected to to the role of President in May last year, and he previously held the post from 2000 to 2008.
In between his these offices, he was Prime Minister of Russia from 1999 to 2000 and again from 2008 to 2012.
The Russian office of first lady demands the attendance of many official ceremonies and functions of state - either by the side of the president or to represent him.
Russia heavily frowns upon the First Lady holding outside employment while occupying the office.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2337048/Russian-president-Putin-wife-Lyudmila-announce-TV-marriage-over.html