• Vladimir Putin swears oath during an inauguration ceremony in the Kremlin, in Moscow. Alexander Astafyev / EPA
    Vladimir Putin swears oath during an inauguration ceremony in the Kremlin, in Moscow. Alexander Astafyev / EPA
  • Vladimir Putin walks prior to his inauguration ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow. Sergei Bobylyov / AFP
    Vladimir Putin walks prior to his inauguration ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow. Sergei Bobylyov / AFP
  • Vladimir Putin enters to take the oath during his inauguration ceremony at the Kremlin Palace in Moscow, Russia. Yevgeny Biyatov / AP Photo
    Vladimir Putin enters to take the oath during his inauguration ceremony at the Kremlin Palace in Moscow, Russia. Yevgeny Biyatov / AP Photo
  • Vladimir Putin takes the oath at the Kremlin in Moscow. Alexey Druzhinin / AFP
    Vladimir Putin takes the oath at the Kremlin in Moscow. Alexey Druzhinin / AFP
  • Vladimir Putin walks before an inauguration ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow. Mikhail Metzel / Reuters
    Vladimir Putin walks before an inauguration ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow. Mikhail Metzel / Reuters
  • Vladimir Putin walks in the Senate building of the Moscow Kremlin before an inauguration ceremony in the Kremlin, in Moscow. Sergey Bobylev / EPA
    Vladimir Putin walks in the Senate building of the Moscow Kremlin before an inauguration ceremony in the Kremlin, in Moscow. Sergey Bobylev / EPA

Russia's Putin sworn in for fourth term as president


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Vladimir Putin was sworn in for another six years as Russian president on Monday.

Standing in the Grand Kremlin Palace's ornately-decorated Andreyevsky Hall with his hand on a gold-embossed copy of the constitution, Putin swore to serve the Russian people, safeguard their rights and freedoms, and defend Russian sovereignty.

Putin was inaugurated for his fourth term as president two months after more than 70 percent of voters backed him in a presidential election in which he had no serious challengers.

His most dangerous opponent, Alexei Navalny, was barred from running in that vote and on Saturday Navalny and hundreds of his supporters were detained by police while protesting over Putin's new term under the slogan: "Putin is not our tsar."

Putin, who is 65, embarks on his fourth term in office buoyed by widespread popular support but weighed down by a costly confrontation with the West, a fragile economy and uncertainty about what happens when his term ends.

The Russian constitution bars him from running again when his new terms ends in 2024.