Los Angeles Times

Clinton’s remark on Putin riles Russian rights activists

She is rebuked for calling the premier the ‘clear winner’ in the presidenti­al race.

- Sergei L. Loiko reporting from moscow sergei.loiko@latimes.com

A group of Russian human rights activists took the rare step Friday of criticizin­g a U.S. official, lashing out at Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton for calling Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin the “clear winner” in this week’s presidenti­al election.

The rebuke came out amid continued charges from election monitors of irregulari­ties in Sunday’s balloting.

Clinton said this week that the United States was ready to cooperate with the new Russian president despite “a number of concerns about this latest electoral process that should be investigat­ed and addressed” and other worries “about the arrests of peaceful protesters, which occurred again on Monday.”

“The election had a clear winner and we are ready to work with President-elect Putin as he is sworn in and assumes the responsibi­lities of the presidency,” Clinton said. “We are going to be looking for ways to enhance cooperatio­n on a range of difficult issues.”

The group of rights activists led by Lyudmila Alexeyeva, head of Moscow Helsinki Group, called Clinton’s remarks “an insult.”

“These words were pronounced on the days when more and more facts are being exposed of mass falsificat­ions of the vote results,” a statement published on the Memorial society website read. “From our point of view, Hillary Clinton’s words can’t be regarded otherwise but an insult to the people struggling for honest elections in Russia.”

“It is time to understand that there are things more important than diplomatic protocol, [such as] the rights of voters for once,” the statement said.

The Russian League of Voters, a nongovernm­ental election monitoring group, issued a statement early this week calling the election results illegitima­te.

“In the backdrop of widescale irregulari­ties, the league deems it impossible to accept the results of the 2012 presidenti­al vote,” the statement said.

Putin rejected such allegation­s, including the charge that people were taken to polling stations by the busloads to vote for him. “Forty-five million people can’t be brought by bus,” he said. “There are things impossible to argue.”

Russian rights groups said that Clinton’s statement made it easier for the Kremlin to brush off charges of fraud.

“Various monitoring groups are still assessing the real results, which fluctuate between 48% and 52% in favor of Putin, which means that he may have won the election,” Valery Borshchev, a member of Moscow Helsinki Group who signed the Friday statement, said in an interview. “But of all things, he was not a clear winner as Hillary Clinton said.”

Opposition leaders say new protests will be held Saturday in Moscow and elsewhere. Hundreds of protesters were detained Monday in Moscow and St. Petersburg after rallies and later released.

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