Russian President Vladimir Putin has introduced a new twist into the hot debate of who will succeed him, saying the Kremlin top job might end up with an as yet unknown outsider.
The identity of who will replace Mr Putin when he steps down in 2008 is the country's hottest political topic, with Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov and First Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev at present seen as strong possibles to follow him.
But at a briefing in Shanghai, Mr Putin (53) steered journalists away from assuming it was down to a straight race between Mr Medvedev and Mr Ivanov.
His successor may be "someone not very well known ... not necessarily one of two people," Mr Putin said, Russian news agencies reported today.
He was emphatic he would not try to stay on for a third successive term after 2008 - something that would require a constitutional change.
"You cannot demand that people respect the law if you yourself break the law," he said in Shanghai where he had been at a regional co-operation conference.
Last May the former KGB intelligence agent, whose high popularity ratings make him the envy of his Western counterparts, said he would eventually name a preferred successor in the interests of ensuring continuity and stability.
Speculation has focused on the lawyer Mr Medvedev and ex-spy Mr Ivanov - an old friend of Mr Putin's - since last November when they were thrust into the spotlight by promotion to top government jobs.
The two come from different backgrounds. But both are seen as likely to maintain Mr Putin's course of ensuring a strong Kremlin and being assertive abroad. Though any favoured candidate would still have to be elected, endorsement by the highly-popular Mr Putin means, in the Russian context, that his election could be taken for granted.