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Russian TV bosses will be 'punished' after Putin's New Year message aired with half his head cut off

Russian TV bosses will be ‘punished’ after Putin’s New Year message was screened with half his head cut off – despite insisting it was a technical glitch and not a political protest

  • Kaliningrad-based TV station blamed a ‘technical glitch’ for the ropey broadcast 
  • It showed Putin’s annual speech with half of the president’s head out of shot
  • Address from the Kremlin is on par with the status of the Queen’s speech 
  • Red-faced TV bosses launched a probe and vowed to ‘punish’ those responsible 

Russian TV bosses are to be ‘punished’ after Vladimir Putin’s head was cut off during a broadcast of the president’s New Year’s Eve message.

The Kaliningrad-based station blamed a ‘technical glitch’ rather than a political protest for the embarrassing scandal.

Only the lower half of Putin’s head was visible as he gave his longest-ever New Year’s message from the Kremlin.

The president’s address is traditionally broadcast a few minutes before midnight in each of Russia’s 11 time zones, and is on par with the Queen’s Christmas Day message in Britain. 

Editors at Kaskad TV realised the error and aborted the broadcast on both television and the internet, replacing it with music. 

Russian President Vladimir Putin's head was cut off by Kaliningrad-based station Kaskad TV

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s head was cut off by Kaliningrad-based station Kaskad TV

Stunned residents posted photos of the president's botched broadcast on social media

Stunned residents posted photos of the president’s botched broadcast on social media

The president's annual address is traditionally broadcast a few minutes before midnight in each of Russia's 11 time zones, and has a status akin to the Queen's Christmas Day message in Britain.

The president's annual address is traditionally broadcast a few minutes before midnight in each of Russia's 11 time zones, and has a status akin to the Queen's Christmas Day message in Britain.

The president’s annual address (left and right) is traditionally broadcast a few minutes before midnight in each of Russia’s 11 time zones, and has a status akin to the Queen’s Christmas Day message in Britain

A screenshot of Putin's address from the Kremlin on New Year's Eve

A screenshot of Putin’s address from the Kremlin on New Year’s Eve

‘Problems with the image during the broadcast of Vladimir Putin’s New Year address were caused by a technical glitch in the broadcasting room,’ said red-faced bosses at the channel.

‘An investigation of the incident is ongoing. Those who are guilty will be punished. Kaskas Media Group offers sincere apologies to the viewers.’

The statement did not offer apologies to Putin and nor did it specify the punishments to be meted out.

Those ‘guilty’ were not named.

A few minutes earlier, a broadcast of New Year message by the regional governor Anton Alikhanov was screened without mishap.

Due to its location on the Baltic Sea, Kaliningrad is the last Russian region to hear Putin’s address, an hour after Moscow.

Putin used the broadcast to lament about the difficulties caused by Covid-19, but also to urge Russians to have faith in themselves.

He noted that ‘not all of us are at the New Year ta
ble right now’ due to deaths and illness caused by the coronavirus, but praised the work of doctors and the emergency services.

Citizens arrive to watch fireworks show at the Manezhnaya Square in Moscow on New Year's Eve

Citizens arrive to watch fireworks show at the Manezhnaya Square in Moscow on New Year’s Eve

Thousands flocked to the streets of Moscow on New Year's Eve to watch the fireworks

Thousands flocked to the streets of Moscow on New Year’s Eve to watch the fireworks

Fireworks go off over Moscow's Red Square marking the beginning of 2021

Fireworks go off over Moscow’s Red Square marking the beginning of 2021

Putin said: 'True, the new dangerous virus has changed and turned upside down the customary mode of life, work and studies, and it forced a revision of and amendments to many plans. But such is our world that the trials of life are unavoidable.'

Putin said: ‘True, the new dangerous virus has changed and turned upside down the customary mode of life, work and studies, and it forced a revision of and amendments to many plans. But such is our world that the trials of life are unavoidable.’

He told Russians: ‘True, the new dangerous virus has changed and turned upside down the customary mode of life, work and studies, and it forced a revision of and amendments to many plans.

‘But such is our world that the trials of life are unavoidable.’

He said: ‘Today, it is especially important to believe in ourselves, not to retreat in the face of difficulties, to preserve our unity, as this is the basis of our future common success.

‘I am sure we will overcome everything together, we will restore and maintain normal life, and keep solving tasks that Russia faces.’

His New Year broadcast lasted six minutes, a record for him, but shorter than his predecessor Boris Yeltsin’s famous message ushering in the year 2000, which announced that former KGB spy Putin was the new acting president. 

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