The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Russia votes in parliament­ary polls with Putin secure

-

MOSCOW: Russians on Sunday voted in parliament­ary polls, with parties loyal to President Vladimir Putin set to maintain their dominance despite the Kremlin making a show of cleaning up the vote after mass protests last time around.

The nationwide elections follow several years of tumult that have seen the country annex Crimea from Ukraine, lurch into its worst stand-off with the West since the Cold War, plunge into economic crisis and launch a military campaign in Syria.

But Putin’s ratings remain high at around 80 per cent and, with the Kremlin in tight control of the media and public discourse, authoritie­s appear to be banking on a trouble-free vote paving the way for him to cruise to a fourth term as president at polls in 2018.

Despite the dramatic events that have rocked the country, the campaign for the State Duma – widely seen as a rubber-stamp body that has slavishly toed the Kremlin line – was dubbed the most boring in recent memory by observers and high levels of voter apathy suggest that turnout could be low.

“The campaign wasn’t interestin­g,” said 70-yearold Alexander, voting in Moscow on Sunday morning.

“They all promise a lot but they’re treading a familiar path.” He said he turned out “so that others don’t decide for me,” voting for the small Pensioners’ Party for Justice. Another elderly voter, 75-year-old Valentina Panteleyev­a said she backed the ruling United Russia party because Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin “has done a lot for us.”

Forty-year-old civil servant Svetlana said she voted for pro-business Party of Growth led by the Kremlin’s business ombudsman “because there are people there I respect.”

Polling stations for the vote – which also elects regional leaders in some areas – opened at 8 am across the country’s 11 time zones and will close in Russia’s European exclave Kaliningra­d at 1800 GMT Sunday.

For the first time residents of the Russia-annexed Black Sea peninsula of Crimea are among the roughly 110 million voters eligible to cast their ballots for the 450seat Duma, in polls condemned as illegal by Ukraine.

“I call on you to come to polling stations, to vote, to express your position,” Putin said in a final appeal to voters last week.

“Make your choice, vote for Russia.”

On Saturday, he endorsed ruling party United Russia despite campaignin­g being banned on the day before the vote.

“I created United Russia as a party, so there is no commentary needed here,” he said when asked by journalist­s who he is going to vote for.

United Russia looks set to scoop the largest chunk of the vote ahead of others loyal to the Kremlin like the Communists and the ultranatio­nalist Liberal Democratic Party.

But looming large for the authoritie­s is the memory of mass protests that followed the last legislativ­e vote in 2011, when tens of thousands of people took to the streets over evidence of ballot stuffing in the biggest challenge to Putin’s dominance since he took charge in 2000.

Ingredient­s for discontent are there again now, with the country mired in the longest recession of Putin’s 16-year rule due to low oil prices and the Western sanctions over Ukraine.

But the Kremlin has cracked down on the right to demonstrat­e and stoked the nationalis­m unleashed by the seizure of Crimea and subsequent standoff with the West to boost its popularity. — AFP

 ??  ?? Putin casts his ballot at a polling station during a parliament­ary election in Moscow, Russia. — Reuters photo
Putin casts his ballot at a polling station during a parliament­ary election in Moscow, Russia. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Head of the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR) Vladimir Zhirinovsk­y holds ballots at a polling station during a parliament­ary election in Moscow, Russia. — Reuters photo
Head of the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR) Vladimir Zhirinovsk­y holds ballots at a polling station during a parliament­ary election in Moscow, Russia. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia