Russians go to polls as Ukraine steps up attacks
MOSCOW: Russia began voting on Friday in an election set to prolong President Vladimir Putin’s rule by six more years, as Kyiv branded the vote a “farce” and launched a barrage of deadly attacks on border regions.
Officials in Moscow warned against any protests during the March 15-17 presidential vote, after calls from the opposition for anti-Putin demonstrations on Sunday.
The Kremlin says the vote will show that the country is fully behind his assault on Ukraine and polling stations have been set up in Russian-held territories.
Ahead of the election, Kyiv ramped up its aerial bombardment of Russian regions just across their shared border.
The Russian national guard said it was fighting off attacks from pro-Ukrainian militias in Kursk, the latest in a string of border clashes.
“I am convinced: you realize what a difficult period our country is going through, what complex challenges we are facing in almost all areas,” Putin said in an address to Russians on the eve of the vote.
“And in order to continue to respond to them with dignity and successfully overcome difficulties, we need to continue to be united and self-confident.”
Polling stations opened in Russia’s easternmost Kamchatka peninsula at 8 a.m. local time on Friday and are set to close at 8 p.m. (1800 GMT) on Sunday in Kaliningrad — a Russian exclave bordering Poland and Lithuania.
All of Putin’s major critics are dead, either in prison or in exile, and authorities blocked the few genuine competitors who tried to stand in the contest.
Alexei Navalny, Putin’s most high-profile opponent over the last decade, died in February in an Arctic prison colony. He was serving 19 years for “extremism,” a sentence widely seen as retribution for his campaigning against the Kremlin leader.
“The organization of and participation in these mass events are punishable by virtue of the legislation in place,” they said in a statement posted on Telegram.
Navalny’s widow, Yulia Navalnaya, has called for rallies outside polling stations on Sunday, the final day of voting.
Kyiv has this week launched some of its most significant aerial attacks since the start of the twoyear conflict.
The governor of Russia’s Belgorod
region, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said that at least three separate waves of aerial attacks had killed two people and wounded several others.
He accused Ukraine of trying to “sow panic, distrust, anger and resentment, in order to break the unit of our society.”
Pro-Ukrainian paramilitaries also claimed to be escalating attacks and incursions in Russian border regions.
In a joint statement, three proKyiv volunteer groups — claiming to consist of anti-Kremlin Russians who have taken up arms — called on authorities to evacuate civilians from the regions of Belgorod and Kursk.
Early voting was already underway
in the occupied territories of Ukraine. The vote will also take place in Crimea, the peninsula annexed by Moscow in 2014 — a move that most of the international community refuses to recognize.
US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller condemned the voting in Russian-held areas.
“The United States does not and will never recognize the legitimacy or outcome of these sham elections held in sovereign Ukraine,” he said.
Ukraine’s foreign ministry on Thursday urged the international media and public figures “to refrain from referring to this farce as ‘elections’ in the language of democratic states.”