The Daily Telegraph

Silent dissenters outfox Kremlin to ruin regime’s victory march

- By James Kilner

ON PAPER, at least, it must have looked so straightfo­rward. Vladimir Putin wanted to fix a presidenti­al election to show the world that ordinary Russians love and admire him, and support his war in Ukraine.

With total domination of the media, which pumps out hardcore prokremlin propaganda, complete control of the Central Election Committee, which cancels Putin’s opponents, and a well-oiled vote-rigging machine, surely nothing could go wrong. Except it did, spectacula­rly. Putin was humiliated and outfoxed by his opponents in an empowering and subtle nationwide protest that reminded suppressed Russians opposed to his authoritar­ian rule that they are not alone.

“It was just wonderful,” one person in Russia who attended one of the Noon against Putin protests told me yesterday.

Putin’s opponents turned his election against him by calling for silent flash mobs for noon yesterday at polling stations across the country, the very place where the Kremlin wanted people to show their fealty by voting for the regime.

Protests are banned in Russia and demonstrat­ors can’t stand in a square and shout anti-kremlin slogans as they are easy prey for the Kremlin’s police. It’s far more complicate­d for police to arrest thousands of people who suddenly turn up en masse at polling stations, the ground-zero of Putin’s biggest propaganda project.

The plan was daring and ingenious but nobody was quite sure how well it would work out, especially because the Kremlin had threatened people with lengthy prison sentences for protesting over the election.

We now have our answer. It appears to have been supported by thousands of Russians, mainly in urban centres, in a widespread and deep-rooted show of opposition that far exceeded expectatio­ns.

The protesters smiled and posed for photos before spoiling their ballot papers with scrawls taunting Putin, glorifying his opponents and calling for peace with Ukraine. Human rights defenders said police detained dozens of protesters at polling stations but,

The world now knows thousands of Russians hate him

essentiall­y, much of the police force seems to have looked the other way.

The flash-mob plan was signed off by opposition leader Alexei Navalny only a few days before his sudden death while held in a prison in the Russian Arctic and, in many ways, yesterday’s protests were his revenge. Yulia Navalnaya, his widow and successor as Russia’s main opposition leader, was cheered and applauded when she joined a queue outside the Russian embassy in Berlin at midday.

And even before the flash mobs, ordinary Russians apparently infused by Navalny’s spirit of defiance, poured green ink into ballot boxes and set fire to polling booths during the first two days of voting.

Of course, the Kremlin’s vote-fixing machine ensured an emphatic victory for Putin which his slavish propaganda machine will use as justificat­ion for his invasion of Ukraine, but the world now knows for certain that thousands of ordinary Russians hate him.

The sight of his enemies celebratin­g and ordinary Russians smiling as they joined flash-mob protests will infuriate the Russian president. His postelecti­on “victory” shampansko­ye no doubt tasted less sweet on Sunday.

 ?? ?? Protesters outside Russia’s Berlin embassy yesterday bring Vladimir Putin to book for Ukraine bloodbath
Protesters outside Russia’s Berlin embassy yesterday bring Vladimir Putin to book for Ukraine bloodbath
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