The Columbus Dispatch

Leading foe can’t face Putin

- By Ivan Nechepuren­ko

MOSCOW — Russian election officials on Monday barred opposition leader Aleksei Navalny from running in next year’s presidenti­al election, a widely expected decision that prompted him to call for his supporters to boycott the election and take part in street protests.

Twelve members of the 13-member Central Election Commission voted to bar Navalny from registerin­g as a presidenti­al candidate, citing his suspended prison sentence in a fraud case, a prosecutio­n he has denounced as politicall­y motivated. One member abstained from voting because of a possible conflict of interest.

The decision was not a surprise; election officials had previously said in interviews that he would be ineligible to run. Navalny, 41, also was prepared for the decision, recording his reaction in a video before it was officially announced.

“We won’t have an election because Vladimir Putin is horribly afraid, he sees a threat in competing with me,” Navalny said in the video. “He gave an instructio­n to his servants from the Central Electoral Commission to reject my registrati­on.”

In the video, Navalny called on his supporters to boycott the election, scheduled for March. He said 84 campaign offices he establishe­d across Russia would now be organizing an election boycott. He also announced a campaign to monitor the turnout and voting at polling places.

Navalny said the candidates who were officially registered to run were personally selected by President Putin. He promised nationwide street protests against the election.

“We will campaign against this fake election and persuade people not to take part in it,” Navalny said in the video.

Navalny has built his political career and popularity on exposing corruption among members of Putin’s inner circle. He led a number of protest rallies in Moscow and across Russia this year that shook the country’s otherwise lethargic political scene. Many young people took part in these rallies.

Navalny noted that his criminal conviction had been overruled by the European Court of Human Rights and that the Council of Europe had urged Russia to allow him to run for the presidency.

Sergei Medvedev, a professor at the Higher School of Economics and a frequent political commentato­r, wrote in a Facebook post that the decision by Pamfilova and her colleagues would further damage the legitimacy of the Russian political system.

“The process of the system’s de-legitimati­on continues,” Sergei Medvedev, a professor at the Higher School of Economics and a frequent political commentato­r, wrote on Facebook. “Elections now look like games of the Night Hockey League, where Putin, in the company of 10 lackeys, scores eight goals,” he wrote, referring to the ice hockey games that Putin takes part in with his friends and government officials.

On Friday, Putin took part in one such hockey match in Red Square, scoring five times.

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 ?? [EVGENY FELDMAN/NAVALNY CAMPAIGN] ?? Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, center, heads to a meeting Monday of the Central Election Commission in Moscow. Twelve of the 13 members of the commission rejected his bid to run for president against Vladimir Putin.
[EVGENY FELDMAN/NAVALNY CAMPAIGN] Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, center, heads to a meeting Monday of the Central Election Commission in Moscow. Twelve of the 13 members of the commission rejected his bid to run for president against Vladimir Putin.

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