1.5 million questions submitted to Putin for call-in show

Vladimir Putin is seen preparing for his annual call-in show - Pool Sputnik Kremlin
Vladimir Putin is seen preparing for his annual call-in show - Pool Sputnik Kremlin

More than 1.5 million questions have been submitted to president Vladimir Putin for his traditional television call-in show, a rare chance for Russians to have local issues solved in one stroke.

Mr Putin began his 17th annual call-in show shortly after noon on Thursday.

Among the topics Mr Putin was expected to address was a plan to ship rubbish from Moscow to the Arctic Arkhangelsk region, an idea that sparked months of protests.

Hundreds of activists in Shiyes, the town where a tip is being built for waste from the capital, had recorded a video appeal to Mr Putin and expected to be given a chance to go on air with him.

But authorities at the last minute moved the place of the live filming from Shiyes to a town 40 kilometres away in a possible attempt to reduce the number of activists taking part.

A controversial tip outside Moscow was closed after Mr Putin criticised it during his 2017 call-in show.

While the call-in show typically focuses on domestic issues, the Netherlands will want to see if Mr Putin addresses the shoot down of Malaysia Airlines flight 17 during the separatist conflict in eastern Ukraine in 2014.

On Wednesday, the Dutch-led investigation charged three Russian fighters with murder, displaying intercepted phone calls in which they asked Russian officials for anti-aircraft weapons and discussed deploying a missile delivered from Russia.

Another looming question is the fate of US investor Michael Calvey, who was arrested after tangling with a businessman linked to top Russian officials.

The US ambassador boycotted the St Petersburg economic forum over the case, which has further spooked foreign investors.