San Francisco Chronicle

Kremlin: Election boycott campaign may be illegal

- By Nataliya Vasilyeva Nataliya Vasilyeva is an Associated Press writer.

MOSCOW — The Kremlin hinted Tuesday at possible legal repercussi­ons for Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny over his calls for a boycott of the March presidenti­al election.

President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, wouldn’t comment on the Election Commission’s decision to bar Navalny from running but said the “calls for boycott ought to be carefully studied to see if they are breaking the law.”

As expected, Russia’s top election body on Monday formally barred Navalny from a presidenti­al run. Navalny, an anticorrup­tion campaigner and Putin’s most prominent rival, promptly put out a video statement saying that the ban shows “Putin is terribly scared and is afraid of running against me.” He called on supporters to stay away from the vote in protest.

Meanwhile, Putin’s backers convened Tuesday afternoon to formally nominate him for presidency after he announced that he will run as an independen­t candidate.

Prominent lawmakers, film actors, musicians and athletes gathered at a Soviet-era exhibition hall to endorse him.

Putin, who has been in power for 18 years and is expected to easily win another six-year term, has so far refrained from campaignin­g. Navalny, meanwhile, has been aggressive­ly seeking votes all year, reaching out to the most remote parts of the country.

Peskov rejected suggestion­s that Navalny’s absence from the ballot could dent the legitimacy of Putin’s possible re-election.

Russian law doesn’t specifical­ly prohibit someone from calling for an election boycott.

Navalny rose to prominence in 2009 with investigat­ions into official corruption and became a protest leader when hundreds of thousands took to the streets across Russia in 2011 to protest electoral fraud.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States