The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Kremlin seeks investigat­ion of vote boycott called by Navalny

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MOSCOW: Hundreds of Russian celebritie­s, sportspeop­le and politician­s nominated President Vladimir Putin for re-election on Tuesday, hours after the Kremlin said it wanted opposition leader Alexei Navalny investigat­ed for calling for a boycott of the vote.

Navalny called for the boycott of the March 18 election on Monday after Russia’s central election commission ruled he was not eligible to run for president due to a suspended prison sentence hanging over him.

The 41-year-old lawyer, who says he’s being excluded on false grounds because the Kremlin is running scared, said he would use his campaign headquarte­rs across the country to call the election’s legitimacy into question and organise protests.

The Kremlin, which points to polls that show Putin is the runaway favourite with Navalny trailing far behind, on Tuesday set the scene for possible police action against Navalny and his supporters whose protests have been broken up before.

“The calls for a boycott will require scrupulous study, to see whether or not they comply with the law,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call.

Declining to comment on the election commission’s decision to bar Navalny, Peskov shrugged off allegation­s that the presidenti­al poll would be a farce without the opposition leader who has made a name for himself by leveraging social media and conducting corruption investigat­ions into senior officials.

“The fact that one of the wouldbe candidates is not taking part has no bearing on the election’s legitimacy,” said Peskov.

Hours later, Putin, 65, was feted by his supporters, almost 700 of whom pledged to back him for reelection – above the minimum 500 required to initiate a presidenti­al bid.

Putin’s own schedule was too busy for him to attend the Moscow nomination event, the Kremlin said, though he is expected to personally submit the necessary paperwork to the central election commission in the coming days.

The former KGB officer is running as an independen­t, a move seen as a way of strengthen­ing his image as a “father of the nation” rather than as a party political figure.

The ruling United Russia party and the Just Russia party have both said they will support him.

“I have worked under the leadership of the president for quite a long time so I know that everything will be alright for us with President Putin,” Sergei Kislyak, Russia’s former ambassador to the United States, now a senator, told Reuters at Tuesday’s nomination meeting.

The commander of a nuclear submarine, Sergei Novokhatsk­y, told the same meeting that Putin had helped revive the Russian Navy, which he described as mired in apathy at the end of the 1990s with many of its ships stuck in ports.

Now, he said, wages were up and Russian ships served throughout the world.

“The course the motherland is on is the right one,” Novokhatsk­y told the meeting. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Putin (second left) speaks with children in Cathedral Square (Sobornaya Square) at the Kremlin before a meeting with members of the government in Moscow, Russia. — Reuters photo
Putin (second left) speaks with children in Cathedral Square (Sobornaya Square) at the Kremlin before a meeting with members of the government in Moscow, Russia. — Reuters photo

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