The Borneo Post

Putin says will engage with West after record vote win

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MOSCOW: Vladimir Putin said he would address disputes with the West after an election that saw him return to the Kremlin with a record vote share, as Moscow faces increasing isolation.

Internatio­nal leaders were slow to congratula­te the Russian president, with Donald Trump yet to comment publicly more than 24 hours after the Sunday election, as monitors reported ballot stuffing and other alleged cases of fraud.

The Russian president, who has ruled Russia for nearly two decades, took almost 77 per cent of the vote.

The poisoning of an ex- spy in Britain along with fresh sanctions from Washington over allegation­s of meddling in the US 2016 election have isolated Moscow to an extent not seen since the Cold War.

Putin on Monday denied he was driving a new arms race with Washington after he unveiled a range of ‘ invincible’ nuclear weapons this month.

“From our side, we will do all we can so that the disputes with our ( internatio­nal) partners be resolved by political and diplomatic means,” he said during a meeting on Monday with the seven other candidates he resounding­ly defeated.

“It goes without saying that not everything depends on us — as with love, both sides have to be involved, otherwise there can be no love at all,” he said.

Putin said he would focus on “increasing the well-being of the residents of this country” through investment­s in healthcare, education and infrastruc­ture during his next term.

With Put in’s most vocal opponent Alexei Navalny barred from running for legal reasons, the outcome of the weekend election was never in doubt, and most of the suspense lay in how many people would turn out to vote.

The Kremlin pushed for high participat­ion to give greater legitimacy to a fourth term for Putin, who is already Russia’s longest- serving leader since Joseph Stalin.

But Nava l ny c a l l e d on supporters to boycott the vote and sent out more than 30,000 monitors to voting stations.

Navalny’s movement and the non- government­al election monitor Golos reported ballot stuffing, repeat voting and Putin supporters being bussed into polling stations en masse.

Fewer irregulari­ties were reported than in previous years, however. An OSCE observer mission said that although the election was marred by a lack of ‘genuine competitio­n’, it was generally well conducted.

Authoritie­s used both the carrot and the stick to boost engagement in the polls.

Selfie competitio­ns, giveaways, food festivals and children’s entertaine­rs were laid on at polling stations to entice voters.

But employees at state and private companies, as well as students, said they had come under other pressure to vote.

Analysts said Put in used tensions with the West to rally support and suggested that armed with a strong new mandate, he could push through further punit ive measures against dissenters.

Putin’s campaign spokesman Andrei Kondrashov said that turnout, which was above 67 per cent, was eight to 10 per centage points higher than expected. He claimed that was ‘ thanks to Britain.’

London this month implicated Putin in the poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal in England with a Soviet- designed nerve agent.

Most of the voters AFP spoke to said they had backed Putin despite Russia’s problems of poverty and poor healthcare, praising his foreign policies.

Western leaders were slow to publicly acknowledg­e Putin’s landslide win.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel ‘ warmly congratula­ted’ Putin while stressing in a message she wrote the need to continue dialogue “to address important bi lateral and internatio­nal chal lenges and f ind viable solutions.” — AFP

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