Moscow and Elton John at odds on Putin’s gay rights call

Kremlin dispute pop singer’s claim to have been in contact with Russian president

The Kremlin has denied that Russian President Vladimir Putin was in contact with pop singer Elton John. Photograph: Getty
The Kremlin has denied that Russian President Vladimir Putin was in contact with pop singer Elton John. Photograph: Getty

It was a story that seemed almost too good to be true. Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, celebrated for his macho bravura, and pop star Elton John, known for his elaborate costumes, ballads and gay activism, coming together in a phone conversation that the singer said had been initiated by the Kremlin.

"Thank-you to President Vladimir Putin for reaching out and speaking via telephone with me today," John wrote in an Instagram post on Monday afternoon that went largely unnoticed for a day. "I look to forward to meeting with you face-to-face to discuss LGBT equality in Russia. "

Once discovered, the Instagram post went viral. Many news organizations reported John’s account. The only problem is that, according to the Kremlin, the phone call never happened.

Putin's press secretary, Dmitri S Peskov, said late on Tuesday that Putin had never spoken to John.

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“This does not correspond to reality. There was no conversation,” Peskov told journalists. He also said his office could not be sure the Instagram post was actually Elton John’s.

But, he said Putin was open to discussion about everything and he that he did not doubt the president would be willing to speak with the singer. There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancy in the accounts, though some have speculated John was the victim of a prank call. John was not available for comment.

The putative conversation, which was confirmed Tuesday by a spokesman for John, evidently stemmed from a BBC interview over the weekend in which the singer spoke about music’s power to encourage tolerance.

In the interview, John said of Putin, “I’d love to sit down with him and talk to him.” He added, “The world faces much bigger problems than gay people.”

After the interview was published, Peskov said there was no meeting planned. “Taking into account that there are many insinuations of late, we regard such information with extreme caution,” he said.

(New York Times)