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Putin said Russia has moved past the worst phase of the economic crisis and claimed credit for softening its impact. Russia is weathering its worst economic downturn in a decade as commodities prices
-- the backbone of its economy -- collapsed late last year. But it emerged from the recession in the third quarter rising by a seasonally adjusted 0.6 percent. "We can say with a large degree of certainty that the peak of the crisis has been overcome," Putin said, adding that the government will have to spend more money to support the economy for the time being. "The exit (strategy) will take time and effort as well as substantial funds," Putin said. In contrast with a bookish Medvedev, who was out of the country Thursday to meet the pope in Italy, Putin has deliberately burnished his common-man appeal. He promised a tough action to clean up the nation's police forces, which have faced mounting criticism for rampant corruption and other abuses. Speaking to a widow of a worker who was among 75 people who died in a disastrous accident at Russia's largest hydroelectric plant, Putin called it a terrible tragedy and promised state support for her children and other relatives of the victims. He promised to raise wages and social benefits and solve other social problems, and demonstrated his knowledge of regional issues. "If the situation demands it, I will come to you or to any other place in the Russian Federation, it's my duty," he said. He also delved into foreign policy issues, sharply admonishing the United States for failing to abolish Cold War-era trade restrictions imposed to penalize the Soviet Union for its refusal to allow free emigration of the Jews. "The Soviet Union is gone, but they (restrictions) have remained," he said. Putin also accused the United States of hampering Russia's accession into the World Trade Organization.
[Associated
Press;
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