ISTANBUL, July 20 (Reuters) – Russian President Vladimir Putin was left waiting and fidgeting for 50 seconds by Turkish counterpart Tayyip Erdogan ahead of talks in Tehran on Tuesday, prompting Turkish media to draw parallels with Putin making him and other leaders stand by in the past.
The meeting in Iran was Putin’s first with a NATO alliance leader since Russia invaded Ukraine in late February. Read full story
A video released by the Turkish presidency showed Putin standing in front of his chair and the nations’ two flags, his hands clasped, mouth twitching and his stance shifting before Erdogan appears. Putin then raises his hands to his sides.
Those 50 seconds that Erdogan made Putin wait, looking frazzled in-front of cameras say plenty of how much has changed after Ukraine: pic.twitter.com/giGirqaYYP
— Joyce Karam (@Joyce_Karam) July 19, 2022
After years of routinely making other leaders wait for him, #Putin ??finds himself forced to stand around and wait for #Erdogan ??!
pic.twitter.com/L30qv5C86T— Daniel Smith (@DanielS18352008) July 19, 2022
“Hello, how are you, good?” Erdogan said as they then smiled at each other and shook hands.
Media reports compared the incident with others of Putin letting world leaders cool their heels in the past, notably in Moscow in 2020 when Erdogan was left waiting for about two minutes by the Russian leader ahead of a meeting.
Turkey’s T24 website asked in a headline: “Was it revenge?”
(Reporting by Daren Butler and Yesim Dikmen; Editing by Jonathan Spicer)