Oman Daily Observer

Kremlin wants opposition’s call for election boycott investigat­ed

POLITICAL LANDSCAPE: Oppn leader Navalny has pledged to try to organise poll boycott

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MOSCOW: The Kremlin said on Tuesday a call by opposition leader Alexei Navalny to boycott next year’s presidenti­al election must be checked to see if it complies with the law, paving the way for possible police action against him and his supporters.

Navalny called on Monday for a boycott of the March 18 election 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 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, Peskov shrugged off allegation­s that the presidenti­al poll would be a farce without Navalny. “The fact that one of the would-be candidates is not taking part has no bearing on the election’s legitimacy,” said Peskov.

Navalny, a 41-year-old lawyer, has repeatedly said the suspended sentence handed to him in an embezzleme­nt case was politicall­y motivated.

On Monday Navalny said millions of voters would be disenfranc­hised without his participat­ion in the election, which opinion polls show incumbent Vladimir Putin winning comfortabl­y.

The European Union also questioned the Russian election commission’s decision to bar Navalny.

“(It) casts a serious doubt on political pluralism in Russia and the prospect of democratic elections next year,” the EU’s External Action Service said in a statement on Tuesday.

“Politicall­y motivated charges should not be used against political participat­ion,” it said, urging Moscow to ensure a “level playing field” for all Russian elections.

Putin, 65, has dominated Russia’s political landscape for the last 17 years and if, as expected, he wins next year’s election would be eligible to serve another six years until 2024, when he turns 72.

Allies laud Putin as a father-of-thenation figure who has restored national pride and expanded Moscow’s global clout with interventi­ons in Syria and Ukraine.

Navalny says Putin’s support is exaggerate­d and artificial­ly maintained by a biased state media and an unfair system which excludes genuine opponents. He says he could defeat him in a fair election, an assertion Putin’s supporters have laughed off.

Navalny has been jailed three times this year and charged with breaking the law for organising public meetings and rallies designed to bolster his presidenti­al campaign.— Reuters

 ?? AFP ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin (centre back) meets with children as they gather for a New Year performanc­e at the Kremlin’s Sobornaya Square in Moscow on Tuesday.—
AFP Russian President Vladimir Putin (centre back) meets with children as they gather for a New Year performanc­e at the Kremlin’s Sobornaya Square in Moscow on Tuesday.—

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