The Herald (South Africa)

Putin — president for life?

● Russians back reforms that could keep leader in power

- Andrew Osborn and Vladimir Soldatkin

Russians opened the door to Vladimir Putin staying in power until 2036 by voting overwhelmi­ngly for constituti­onal changes that will allow him to run again for president twice, but critics said the outcome was falsified on an industrial scale.

Official results published yesterday , after 100% of ballots had been counted, showed that the former KGB officer, who has ruled Russia for more than two decades as president or prime minister, had easily won the right to run for two more six-year terms after the present one ends in 2024.

That means Putin, 67, could rule until the age of 83.

The Central Election Commission said 77.9% of votes counted across the world’s largest country had supported changing the constituti­on.

Just more than 21.2% had voted against, it said.

Commission head Ella Pamfilova said the vote had been transparen­t and that officials had done everything to ensure its integrity.

Opposition politician Alexei Navalny had a different view and called the vote an illegitima­te and illegal show designed to legalise Putin’s presidency for life.

“We’ll never recognise this result,” Navalny told supporters in a video.

Navalny said the opposition would not protest for now because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, but would do so in big numbers in the autumn if its candidates were blocked from taking part in regional elections or their results were falsified.

“What Putin fears most is the street,” Navalny said.

“He will not leave until we start to take to the streets in the hundreds of thousands and in the millions.”

Russians had been encouraged to back Putin’s power move, described by critics as a constituti­onal coup, with prize draws offering flats and an ad campaign highlighti­ng other constituti­onal amendments in the same reform bundle, such as pension protection and a de facto ban on same-sex marriages.

One-off payments of 10,000 roubles (about R2,400) were transferre­d to those with children at Putin’s order as people headed to polling stations on Wednesday, the last day of the vote, held over seven days to try to limit the spread of the virus.

Moscow resident Mikhail Volkov said he had voted in favour of the reforms.

“We need radical changes and I’m for them,” he said.

However, others were less enthusiast­ic.

“I didn’t read about the amendments if I’m honest,” another voter, Lyudmila, said.

“What’s the point of voting if they’ve already decided for you?

“It’s like that in our country — read something and vote. I voted.”

Turnout was 65%, election officials said.

Putin, already the longestser­ving leader in modern Russian history since Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, made no mention of how the changes could affect his own career in an eve-of-vote speech on Tuesday.

He has said he has yet to decide on his future.

Critics, who liken Putin to a latter-day tsar, say they are sure he will run again, but some analysts say he may want to keep his options open to avoid becoming a lame duck.

At 60%, according to the Levada pollster, his approval rating remains high but well down on its peak of nearly 90%.

With Russia reporting thousands of new Covid-19 cases each day, opponents have been unable to stage protests but have mocked the vote online, sharing photograph­s of polling stations in apartment stairwells, supermarke­t trolleys and the boot of a car.

A small group of activists staged a symbolic protest at Red Square on Wednesday afternoon, using their prostrate bodies to form the year 2036 before being swiftly detained by police, TV Rain reported.

Separately, the “No! Campaign” called on supporters to head for Moscow’s Pushkinska­ya Square after voting.

In the event, only dozens turned out amid a heavy police presence.

Opposition politician­s said a few hundred people had attended.

Those who did chanted “Russia will be free.”

Another slogan suggested Putin should resign.

Non-government election monitor Golos cited numerous irregulari­ties with the vote and said it would not be able to confirm the outcome as legitimate. —

 ??  ?? VLADIMIR PUTIN
VLADIMIR PUTIN

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa