The last Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev was forced to deny rumours of his death after hackers planted a false report on Twitter accounts of a state news agency.
"I'm alive and well," Gorbachev told the website of Novaya Gazeta newspaper yesterday, using a blanked-out Russian expletive to describe his ill-wishers who he said were "hoping in vain".
His indignant response came after two Twitter accounts of the RIA Novosti state news agency posted news of his death.
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The message, published in a screenshot on the website of Kommersant daily, was hardly convincing. It said that "Mikhail Gorbachev has died in the Shoko cafe in Yekaterinburg."
It added that Gorbachev died as he was talking to a maverick politician, Yevgeny Roizman, who is standing for mayor of the Siberian city, suggesting a political motive for the message.
The news agency said it would ask the FSB security service and prosecutors to investigate the hacker attack.
Gorbachev said in his statement on the website of Novaya Gazeta, which he co-owns, that he suspected the hackers were "carrying out the orders of some authorities."
He said he had asked the newspaper to investigate who was circulating the rumours.
Gorbachev, 82, has suffered health problems and his spokesman said in June that he was in hospital for planned treatment of his diabetes.