A
short video clip posted by TV reporter Pavel Zarubin showed the
two men exchanging opening remarks, with no reference to the
beating episode that drew condemnation even from some
pro-Kremlin hardliners.
Putin said that there was a "positive dynamic" in Chechnya,
largely thanks to Kadyrov and his team. Kadyrov was shown
handing him some papers from a file.
Putin has allowed Kadyrov free rein to run the southern Muslim
region as a personal fiefdom in return for keeping it stable and
loyal following wars in the 1990s and 2000s in which it tried to
break away from Moscow.
Kadyrov has cultivated the image of a ruthless Putin ally and an
aggressive cheerleader for Russia's war in Ukraine, but some
commentators suggested he had crossed the line this week by
endorsing the attack by his son Adam on prisoner Nikita Zhuravel.
He posted a video showing the younger Kadyrov punching and
kicking Zhuravel as the prisoner cowered in a chair, and said he
was proud of his son for acquiring "adult ideals of honour,
dignity and defence of his religion".
The alleged Koran-burning did not take place in Chechnya but
Russian investigators said they transferred Zhuravel to Chechen
custody because Muslims there saw themselves as victims of the
incident.
The beating opened up Putin to accusations that he had handed
over an ethnic Russian "to be devoured by the Chechens", former
Kremlin speechwriter Abbas Gallyamov, now a harsh Putin critic,
said this week. Even pro-Kremlin war commentators described the
episode as an outrage.
Kadyrov, 46, has been the subject of intense speculation over
his health, with rumours swirling this month that he was dead or
in a coma. Last week he published a post on Telegram saying that
he was fine, and that his reason for travelling to a Moscow
hospital was to visit the bedside of a sick uncle.
(Reporting by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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