Putin-Macron meeting: Missing corona test apparently reason for giant table

meeting at a distance
Huge table caused ridicule at Putin-Macron meeting – the reason was serious

Vladimir Putin and Emmanuel Macron sat across from each other at a six meter long table when they met in Moscow

© Russian Look / Imago Images

The photo of Vladimir Putin and Emmanuel Macron, which shows the two presidents at a six-meter-long table, caused a great stir after their meeting – and speculation. Now there is an explanation for the giant table: a missing corona test by the French President.

When asked what will be remembered from the meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday in Moscow, in many cases this answer will certainly come up: the table. The white, decorated endless board, on which Putin placed Macron at a safe distance of six meters, noticeably distracted from the serious content of the conversation about the Ukraine crisis.

Countless memes and jokes about the table circulated on the Internet, and the arrangement raised questions in political circles. Apparently the Kremlin and the Élysée Palace felt compelled to make an explanation.

Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov justified the great distance between the two heads of state on Friday with the Kremlin’s Corona protocol. Macron refused to undergo a PCR test in Russia, Peskov said. “Some follow their own rules. But in this case, a health protocol will be applied to protect the health of our president and that of his guest,” the Kremlin spokesman said.

The procedure has no political reason, emphasized Peskow. The physical distance “does not affect the negotiations in any way”. It had previously been speculated whether the distance was intended to symbolize Putin’s cool attitude toward Macron.

Macron rejected Russian corona test

Putin, who maintains extremely extreme measures to protect against the corona virus, has also allowed some foreign heads of state and government to get closer to him in recent weeks. However, they had apparently agreed to a Russian PCR test.

Macron refused. The Russian conditions, which would have allowed a closer conversation between the two heads of state, would have imposed a health protocol “that we found neither acceptable nor compatible with the constraints of our agenda,” the Élysée said. “We have opted for the other option proposed by the Russian protocol.”

“We knew very well that it didn’t mean a handshake and that long table. But we couldn’t accept them getting their hands on the President’s DNA,” a source told the news outlet Reuters and pointed to security concerns if the French head of state were tested by Russian doctors.

“This has nothing to do with politics and does not affect the negotiations in any way,” he said. A second source close to Macron said he instead took a French PCR test before leaving and an antigen test in Russia with his own doctor.

“The Russians have told us that Putin needs to be kept in a strict health bubble,” said a second source. Macron’s office said Russia’s health protocol was “neither acceptable to us nor compatible with our busy schedule,” referring to the amount of time it would have been necessary to wait to get the results.

Other presidents have already sat at the endless table with Putin

The strange scene at the endless table was a godsend for many Internet users. Memes – i.e. satirically composed and virally distributed content – ​​flooded the Russian online world in particular. In one picture, the giant table became a table tennis table, with the two heads of state holding the appropriate bats in their hands. In another meme, the creators seated the participants of the famous painting “The Last Supper” at the table with Putin and Macron.

Incidentally, Macron was not the only one who had to sit down at the six-meter table. Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi also held their talks with Putin there. Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) is expected in Moscow on Tuesday. The question is how distant this meeting will be.

nk
AFP

source site-3