Cape Times

Putin gets 77% of vote amid ballot stuffing claims

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MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin won a fourth presidenti­al term with nearly 77% of the vote – his highest score ever and a massive mandate to pursue his nationalis­t, assertive policies for another six years in power.

Near-final results released on Monday showed that the other seven candidates were far behind Putin in Sunday’s voting.

Observers reported widespread ballot stuffing and unpreceden­ted pressure on Russians to vote, but that is unlikely to seriously damage Putin given his popularity and his tight control over Russian politics.

With 99.8% of the vote counted, the Central Election Commission said communist Pavel Grudinin came in a distant second with 11.8%. Third was ultra-nationalis­t Vladimir Zhirinovsk­y with 5.6%. The only candidate to openly criticise Putin during the campaign, liberal TV star Ksenia Sobchak, won just 1.6%.

Putin’s most serious rival, opposition leader Alexei Navalny, was barred from the race.

The electoral commission said official turnout was 67%, but the figure was thrown into question by images circulatin­g online of ballot stuffing and nationwide accounts of workers being coerced to vote.

Putin has never faced a serious threat to his rule since he came to power on the eve of the new millennium. He won 53% of the vote in the 2000 presidenti­al election, 71% in 2004 and 63% in 2012. The massive victory gives Putin new confidence to stand up to the West.

The election came amid escalating Cold War-like tensions, with accusation­s that Moscow was behind the nerve-agent poisoning this month of a former Russian double agent in Britain and that its internet trolls had waged an extensive campaign to undermine the 2016 US presidenti­al election.

The accusation­s ultimately bolstered Putin among a populace that sees him as their defender against a hostile outside world and the embodiment of Russia’s resurgent power on the world stage.

The election was such a foregone conclusion that Putin gave only a perfunctor­y victory speech and said nothing about what he will do for his country.

“We are bound for success,” he said, to crowds near the Kremlin chanting “Russia! Russia!”

Putin’s victory puts his opponents in a tough spot.

Navalny called for a boycott, but it’s unclear whether that had any effect. He then clashed publicly with Sobchak on Sunday night, accusing her of being a Kremlin stooge. Both were silent on Monday, and their future plans are unclear.

Putin’s electoral power has centred on stability, a quality cherished by Russians after the chaotic breakup of the Soviet Union. But that stability has been bolstered by a suppressio­n of dissent, the withering of independen­t media and the top-down control of politics called “managed democracy”.

That included pressure on voters to fulfil their “civic duty”.

Two election observers in Gorny Shchit, a rural district of Yekaterinb­urg, told The Associated Press they saw an unusually high influx of people going to the polls just before 2pm. A doctor at a hospital in the Ural mountains city told the AP that 2pm was the deadline for health officials to report to their superiors that they had voted.

Observer Sergei Krivonogov said voters were taking pictures of the pocket calendars or leaflets that poll workers distribute­d, seemingly as proof of voting.

Other examples from observers and social media included ballot boxes being stuffed with extra ballots in multiple regions; an election official assaulting an observer; CCTV cameras obscured by flags or nets from watching ballot boxes; discrepanc­ies in ballot numbers; last-minute voter registrati­on changes likely designed to boost turnout; and a huge pro-Putin sign in one polling station.

In his next six years, Putin is likely to assert Russia’s power abroad even more strongly.

He recently announced that Russia has developed advanced nuclear weapons capable of evading missile defences. – AP

 ??  ?? PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN
PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN

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