The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Putin eyes fourth term as Russians go to polls

Putin fatigue may be spreading across the country, and many Russians are expected to skip the polls – analysts

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MOSCOW: Russians voted yesterday in an election set to hand President Vladimir Putin a fourth Kremlin term, as the country is embroiled in a crisis with Britain and its allies over a spy poisoning.

With the vast country stretching across 11 time zones, polls opened in the Russian far east at 2000 GMT on Saturday and will close in Kaliningra­d, the country’s exclave on the EU border, at 1800 GMT yesterday.

With Putin’s main challenger Alexei Navalny barred from taking part in the poll for legal reasons, the result of the election is expected to be hugely predictabl­e, with overall turnout remaining the only element of surprise.

Some analysts say that after 18 years of leadership – both as president and prime minister – Putin fatigue may be spreading across the country, and many Russians are expected to skip the polls.

The Kremlin needs a high turnout to add greater legitimacy to a new term for Putin, who is already Russia’s longest serving leader since Joseph Stalin.

Yesterday marked four years since Putin signed a treaty that declared Crimea part of Russia following its annexation from Ukraine, a move that led to the outbreak of a pro-Kremlin insurgency in the east of the exSoviet country, in a conflict that claimed more than 10,000 lives.

In retaliatio­n, Kiev said earlier this week Russians living in Ukraine would not be able to vote as access to Moscow’s diplomatic missions would be blocked.

Since first being elected as president in 2000, Putin has stamped his total authority on Russia muzzling opposition and reassertin­g Moscow’s lost might abroad.

Polling at around 70 per cent, the 65-year-old former KGB officer is certain to extend his term to 2024 despite a lacklustre campaign and his refusal to participat­e in televised debates.

Putin has sought to use the election run-up to emphasise Russia’s role as a major world power, recently boasting of its ‘invincible’ new weapons and continuing Moscow’s support for the Syrian regime in a bloody civil war.

Rising tensions with the West over the poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal in Britain, and new sanctions from Washington over alleged election meddling, strengthen the impression of a Russia at loggerhead­s with the rest of the world.

Putin, who has run under the slogan ‘a strong president – a strong Russia’, has declined to take part in televised debates and shot no new material for his own

I don’t know where to turn to complain... We don’t need changes now. Putin needs to finish what he started. Sergei Inshakov, 37-year-old part-time taxi driver

campaign advertisem­ents.

He is standing against a motley crew of seven challenger­s, including millionair­e communist Pavel Grudinin and former reality TV host Ksenia Sobchak, but none are polling more than eight percent.

Opposition leader Navalny has called on Russians to boycott the election he says is a sham.

Many Russians say they would vote for Putin simply because they do not see an alternativ­e, given his chokehold on domestic politics.

Sergei Inshakov, a 37-year-old part-time taxi driver, said he would vote for Putin even though he was not getting enough state support for his two children.

“I don’t know where to turn to complain,” he said, insisting Putin was still Russia’s best hope.

“We don’t need changes now. Putin needs to finish what he started,” he said.

Overall turnout is expected to be between 63 and 67 per cent, according to official pollsters.

Levada’s Stepan Goncharov said the independen­t pollster – which was barred by law to publish research related to the election during the campaign – expected turnout to be between 57 and 68 per cent.

There has been a particular focus on the youth vote, with prizes offered for the best selfies taken at polling stations and a sexually charged online campaign that brands the election as ‘for adults only’.

Students in several cities have been warned they may face problems in examinatio­ns or even expulsion if they do not turn out to vote. Heads of schools and state enterprise­s have put pressure on their employees to vote, as in previous elections.

Putin first became president after Boris Yeltsin sensationa­lly resigned on New Year’s Eve 1999.–

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Putin votes at a polling station during Russia’s presidenti­al election in Moscow.
— AFP photo Putin votes at a polling station during Russia’s presidenti­al election in Moscow.

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