logo
‘Vladimir Putin bought me a £16k motorbike as a gift while in Alaska… I should probably write him a thank you letter'

‘Vladimir Putin bought me a £16k motorbike as a gift while in Alaska… I should probably write him a thank you letter'

Scottish Sun13 hours ago
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
RUSSIAN tyrant Vladimir Putin gave an Alaskan local a brand new £16,000 motorbike while visiting the US for his high-stakes summit with Donald Trump.
Mark Warren, 66, was given the bike after footage of him complaining he couldn't fix his Soviet-era motorcycle went viral on Russian media.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
8
Mark Warren, 66, was given a new motorbike by Putin
Credit: AP
8
He complained he couldn't get new parts for his Soviet-era bike
Credit: Reuters
8
The Russian leader visited Alaska on Friday for talks with Trump
Credit: Reuters
The retired fire inspector, who lives in Anchorage, where the US and Russian leaders met last Friday, rode off with a brand new Ural Gear Up sidecar.
Manufacturing firm Ural, a motors company founded in 1941 in Western Siberia when it was under Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union, now operates in Kazakhstan.
Warren complained he was unable to obtain the correct parts to fix the motorcycle because of supply-and-demand issues and sanctions on Russia.
State-sponsored Russian media spotted Warren running errands on the bike one week before the Trump and Putin summit.
He said: "It went viral, it went crazy, and I have no idea why, because Im really just a super-duper normal guy.
"They just interviewed some old guy on a Ural, and for some reason they think its cool."
On August 13, two days before the Trump-Putin summit to discuss the war in Ukraine, Warren received a call from a Russian journalist.
They told him: "They've decided to give you a bike."
Warren said he was also sent a document noting the gift was arranged through the Russian Embassy in the States.
The Alaska man thought it was a scam - but after Trump and Putin departed Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson following their three-hour summit, he got another call about the bike.
Hilarious moment Zelensky gets revenge on reporter who criticised him for not wearing suit to first Oval Office meeting
Warren was told his new £16,000 bike was at the same base the world leaders had met at.
He was instructed to go to an Anchorage hotel for the handoff.
After arriving alongside his wife, he met six Russian men who presented him with the mind-boggling gift.
"I dropped my jaw," he said.
"I went, 'You've got to be joking me'."
He said the men only asked to interview and picture him.
Two reporters and someone from the group got on the bike with him while he drove around the car park to show it off.
The lucky punter had reservations about the Ural being a malicious Russian scam.
8
Putin pictured driving a motorbike in 2019
Credit: AP:Associated Press
8
Warren posing with his old and new bike
Credit: AP
8
Putin speaking during the press conference in Alaska on Friday
Credit: AP
But he accepted the gift, which according to its paperwork was manufactured on August 12.
He said: "The obvious thing here is that it rolled off the showroom floor and slid into a jet within probably 24 hours."
And he told the Daily Mail: "I'm dumbfounded. I guess I should probably write Putin a thank you letter or something.
"I haven't. I've been so busy it hasn't really sunk in yet."
He added: "It's super cool, you know? I mean, it's just such a unique bike."
It comes as Putin continues to wage his bloody war on Ukraine.
The despot unleashed a fresh breakthrough assault just hours before his summit with Trump.
And just hours after Trump's summit with European allies, Russia blitzed Ukraine over Monday night with 270 drones and missiles.
The brutal attacks targeted energy and transport infrastructure.
Just before Zelesnky and his European counterparts were set to meet Trump on Monday, another vicious attack killed 14 people and injured dozens in Ukraine.
8
He said he should write a thank you letter to Putin
Credit: AP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dan Jarvis is the model of a modern flailing minister
Dan Jarvis is the model of a modern flailing minister

Spectator

time26 minutes ago

  • Spectator

Dan Jarvis is the model of a modern flailing minister

I wonder how No. 10 decides which minister is up for the ritual humiliation of the Today programme each morning. Russian roulette? An elaborate lottery? A competition – last person to spell out 'TOOLMAKER' using alphabetti spaghetti? Either way, today's lucky victim for the airwaves was Home Office minister Dan Jarvis. 'Let's speak to someone who should know what's going on in the Home Office,' began presenter Emma Barnett, ominously. Someone enter the word 'should' into the Mr Universe competition: for here it was doing a lot of heavy lifting. Mr Jarvis made an audible gulp as he was introduced as somebody who knew what he was talking about. Given the Starmer government's propensity for sending out its lower-order goons into acts of broadcasting masochism without proper briefing, it's quite possible that until this moment Mr Jarvis believed himself to be giving a word or two about kittens or sunbeams. As he panicked, Mr Jarvis began throwing words around with gay abandon. He circled round himself, looped over himself and tied himself into a knot. 'The reality is there will be a range of different arrangements… no one thinks hotels are the appropriate setting… the appropriate setting will be a range of different arrangements.' Stock phrase called back to stock phrase in chorused glee. We were basically in Gilbert and Sullivan territory: he was the very model of a modern flailing minister. Despite Mr Jarvis's protestations that actually the government was phasing out hotel use, Emma Barnett pointed out that no alternative to hotels had been found and, as it stood, the practice of just piling people into hotels 'was asylum policy and it's in chaos'. The Minister made a noise like a soul escaping the body. Perhaps it was his dignity making a final, Dunkirk-style evacuation because after this, he launched into the same old 'it's not our fault' spiel. It's this familiar nonsense which we are so used to hearing from government ministers as the fruits of their own incompetence are presented to them, like one might present an uneaten dinner to a stubborn toddler or a recently discovered indoor mess to a recalcitrant pet. 'Do you think you're going to fulfil your election pledge to close asylum hotels?' asked Ms Barnett, in a tone which suggested she knew the answer already. Cue a bizarre directional waffle from Mr Jarvis, everything was going to happen 'up stream', 'in the round', 'at source' and 'at pace'. A sort of Hokey Cokey of incoherence. However it is they decide on who goes out to bat first thing in the morning, I bet Mr Jarvis is praying it won't be him again.

Sustainable Switch: DR Congo and the cost of tech
Sustainable Switch: DR Congo and the cost of tech

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Sustainable Switch: DR Congo and the cost of tech

Aug 14 (Reuters) - This is an excerpt of the Sustainable Switch newsletter, where we make sense of companies and governments grappling with climate change, diversity, and human rights on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. To receive the full newsletter in your inbox for free sign up here. Hello! All aspects of environment, social and governance issues are high on the agenda in today's focus as we look at the mineral-rich but conflict-stricken Democratic Republic of Congo. Here, we'll be breaking down an in-depth Reuters investigation into the African nation's mines and looking into why parties such as the United States and China have been getting involved. For a bit of context, the Democratic Republic of Congo has been fighting Rwanda-backed M23 rebels who have seized swathes of its territory this year. Click here for a brief Reuters explainer of the conflict. As for the minerals, the Democratic Republic of Congo is rich in cobalt, lithium, uranium, tin, tungsten, tantalum, gold, diamonds, copper, charcoal and timber. Click here for a Reuters story on the concerns among Congo's residents and environmentalists who witnessed illegal logging by M23 in the UNESCO World Heritage site west of Bukavu to produce charcoal and timber. The Reuters investigation Now, let's get into this latest investigation where Reuters reporters visited Rubaya in March this year. Rubaya produces around 15% of the world's coltan, all dug manually by impoverished locals who earn a few dollars per day. Coltan is processed into a heat-resistant metal called tantalum used in mobile phones and other electronics and prized by the aerospace and medical industries among others. Control of this mine is the biggest prize in a long-running conflict in this central African nation. The area was seized in April 2024 by M23 to help fund its insurgency. Reuters reporters were told by M23 officials that the rebels had imposed a tax on mineral traders of 15% on the value of coltan they purchase from the informal miners who work the area. M23 was taking in $800,000 monthly from levies collected from coltan mining in eastern Congo, according to the December U.N. report. Rwanda's government has long denied that it traffics in coltan looted from its neighbor or that it backs M23. Reuters journalists who visited the mining sites in March had to abandon their four-wheel-drive Land Cruisers after the vehicles became stuck on the muddy road from Goma. They walked 5 kilometers (3 miles) to reach the town and then hopped on the back of motorcycles with rebel officials to reach the pits. There, the reporters saw laborers hauling coltan ore. The ore was loaded onto motorbikes and eventually shipped thousands of kilometers away to Asia. There it's processed into tantalum, a heat-resistant metal that fetches more than $300 a kilogram and is in high demand by makers of mobile phones, computers, aerospace components and gas turbines. U.N. experts and human rights activists have long warned that profits from illegal mining are funding conflict. Reuters witnessed at least a dozen children working at the Rubaya mine: Young boys entered the shafts to haul out ore and carry it to the basins where girls worked alongside adults washing and drying the coltan. The U.S. and China's involvement Some U.S. entrepreneurs have set their sights on Rubaya's coltan as President Donald Trump seeks to 'broker a peace deal to end the conflict' and 'promote development of the region's mineral wealth.' The country's formal mining sector at present is dominated by Chinese companies. This week, the U.S. Treasury sanctioned participants for allegedly smuggling minerals in Congo. The companies sanctioned included two Hong Kong-based exporters, the Cooperative des Artisanaux Miniers du Congo (CDMC) and the Coalition des Patriotes Resistants Congolais-Forces de Frappe (PARECO-FF), a pro-government Congolese militia that the U.S. said controlled the Rubaya mining site from 2022 to early 2024, prior to M23's takeover. CDMC said in a statement received by Reuters that "the presence and taxation of mining activity by armed groups such as PARECO-FF and, more recently, the M23 rebels, have prevented CDMC from exercising lawful control over its concession," it said. PARECO-FF could not be reached for comment. Additionally, Texas hedge fund manager Gentry Beach, who is chairman of investment firm America First Global and helped raise funds for Trump's election campaign in 2016, was part of a consortium looking to negotiate rights to the Rubaya mine, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter. The source told Reuters that Beach's group had proposed to the Congolese government taking a majority stake in the mine, with Kinshasa retaining a 30% interest. ESG LENS In keeping with the focus on the Democratic Republic of Congo, today's lens highlights what's at stake and the regions captured by M23's Rwanda-backed rebels as peace talks scheduled to resume in Doha, Qatar, last week have been delayed. The Qatar-hosted talks were intended to run parallel to a mediation effort by the Trump administration involving Congo and Rwanda. Washington hopes the diplomatic push will produce a sustainable peace and attract billions of dollars of Western investment to a region rich in tantalum, gold, cobalt, copper and lithium. Today's Sustainable Switch was edited by Mark Potter Think your friend or colleague should know about us? Forward this newsletter to them. They can also subscribe here.

US trans woman challenges Dutch asylum rejection
US trans woman challenges Dutch asylum rejection

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

US trans woman challenges Dutch asylum rejection

AMSTERDAM, Aug 20 (Reuters) - A 28-year-old transgender woman from the U.S. began a legal challenge on Wednesday to the rejection of her asylum application in the Netherlands where she had sought political asylum saying she no longer felt safe in the United States. Veronica Clifford-Carlos, a visual artist from California, came to the Netherlands - the first country to legalise same-sex marriage and known for its strong protections of LGBT rights - because the Trump administration's policies towards transgender people made her feel unsafe, her lawyer's office said. The case, the first of its kind in the Netherlands, will be heard in a court in Amsterdam starting Wednesday, with a ruling expected in four to six weeks. Since taking office in January, President Donald Trump has issued executive orders limiting transgender rights, banned transgender people from serving in the armed forces, and rescinded anti-discrimination policies for LGBTQ+ people. Dutch advocacy group LGBT Asylum Support, which backs the lawsuit, is currently assisting around 20 U.S. trans individuals with pending asylum claims. According to data from the Immigration and Naturalisation Service (IND), 29 Americans applied for asylum in the Netherlands during the first half of this year. In previous years there were between nine and 18 applicants per year, an IND spokesperson said. "The IND generally states that discrimination by authorities and fellow citizens can be considered an act of persecution if it is so severe that victims can no longer function socially and societally," LGBT Asylum Support said in a statement. "But the IND maintains that there are no grounds for exceptional treatment of transgender and queer refugees from the U.S."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store