Two further luxury rail cars are also purportedly planned to accommodate guests and security guards, at a cost of $6.2 million (£4.8m). The order includes an opulent $5.4 million (£4.2m) lounge carriage, while a double carriage, for meetings and recreation, is the priciest of the lot at $18.8 million (£14.6m). In total, the train has cost over $75 million (£58.4m) according to the Dossier Center, including $16 million (£12.4m) for maintenance – all allegedly bankrolled by the Russian taxpayer, of course. Zircon Service did not reply to questions from the Dossier Center, while the Kremlin's press office denied the report's findings to CNN, insisting: “President Putin does not have such a car in his use or in his ownership.”
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