On Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin unveiled a secret plan in which he liked people very much like him to take his place during events that might pose a high risk, but he refused.

"Are you the real Putin?" Asked a Itar-Tass journalist.
The President replied "Yes" during a series of interviews marking the 20th anniversary of his accession.
The question was in the context of questions on the search engines about what is published about the possibility of a similar to Putin.
"I refused to have people like me," Putin said.
"This was during the most difficult times of the fight against terrorism," beginning in 2000, when Russia was at war with the separatist movement in Chechnya, he added.
After his appointment as prime minister at the end of 1999, Putin launched the second war on Chechnya, which led to the restoration of the former Soviet republic by the Russian army.
This victory was followed by bloody attacks and hostage-taking by Islamists in the Caucasus.
"Would a similar person have taken your place in dangerous situations?" Asked the journalist.
"Yes," Putin replied.
On the Internet, hypotheses are circulated that say the real Putin died and his place is similar to him.
The authors of these assumptions justify this by saying that the face of the Russian president has not been affected by the passing of the 67-year-old or his limited knowledge of German, even though he worked in East Germany when he was a KGB agent or Soviet intelligence.
In 2015, Putin did not appear publicly for 10 days, prompting speculation.
Some confirmed that he had visited Switzerland to give birth to a child from a passing relationship or that he had been overthrown in a coup or that he was sick or dead.
"Gossip is for fun," Putin said, commenting on the issue.