In Summary
MOSCOW,
Vladimir
Putin cruised to victory in Russia's presidential election on Sunday,
giving him at least another six years in power as Moscow's relations
with the West become increasingly strained.
Putin,
who has ruled Russia for almost two decades, recorded his best ever
election performance with
more than 76 percent of the vote, but the
opposition cried foul.
STUFFING
Monitors
reported ballot stuffing and other cases of alleged fraud as the
Kremlin pushed for a high turnout to give greater legitimacy to Putin's
historic fourth term.
The Russian
strongman ran against seven other candidates, but his most vocal critic
Alexei Navalny was barred from the ballot for legal reasons and the
final outcome was never in doubt.
"I see in this (result) the confidence and
hope of our people," Putin said in an address to a crowd of supporters
on a square next to the Kremlin after exit polls put him on track for a
resounding victory.
"Our thoughts
will turn to the future of our great country and the future of our
children," said the man who is already Russia's longest-serving leader
since Stalin.
About 107 million
Russians were eligible to cast ballots and in its latest update on
participation, three hours before polls closed in Moscow, the central
election commission said turnout was at 60 percent.
Authorities used both the carrot and the stick to boost engagement in the polls.
PRESSURE
Selfie
competitions, giveaways, food festivals and children's entertainers
were laid on at polling stations in a bid to create a festive atmosphere
around the election.
But employees
of state and private companies reported coming under pressure to vote,
while students were threatened with problems in their exams or even
expulsion if they did not take part, according to the independent Novaya
Gazeta newspaper.
According to
central election commission data with 90 percent of ballots counted,
Putin took 76.4 percent of the vote, well ahead of his nearest
competitor Communist Party candidate Pavel Grudinin who was on 12
percent.
Ultra-nationalist firebrand
Vladimir Zhirinovsky took around 6 percent, former reality TV presenter
Ksenia Sobchak was on 1.5 percent and other candidates were on less than
a single percentage point each.
The
election was held as Russia faces increasing isolation on the world
stage over a spy poisoning in Britain and a fresh round of US sanctions
just as it gears up for the football World Cup in the summer.
Navalny
— who called on his supporters to boycott the "fake" vote and sent more
than 33,000 observers across the country to see how official turnout
figures differed from those of monitors — said there had been
"unprecedented violations".
JINPING
His
lawyer Ivan Zhdanov said the actual national turnout at 1700 GMT, when
polls closed in Moscow, was 55 percent, according to data collected by
monitors.
Navalny's opposition
movement and the non-governmental election monitor Golos reported ballot
stuffing, repeat voting and Putin supporters being bussed into polling
stations en masse.
One election
commission worker in the republic of Dagestan, which traditionally
registers extremely high official turnout figures, told AFP around 50
men entered the station where he was working and physically assaulted an
observer before stuffing a ballot box.
But the electoral commission dismissed most concerns, saying monitors sometimes misinterpret what they see.
Runner-up Grudinin said the elections had been "dishonest" in comments carried by news agencies following early results.
Among
the first world leaders to congratulate Putin was Chinese President Xi
Jinping, who has just been handed a second term himself and has gained a
path to indefinite rule after presidential term limits were lifted last
week.
KGB AGENT
"China
is willing to work with Russia to keep promoting China-Russia relations
to a higher level, provide driving force for respective national
development in both countries, and promote regional and global peace and
tranquility," Xi said in his message.
Since
first being elected president in 2000, Putin has stamped his total
authority on the world's biggest country, muzzling opposition, putting
television under state control and reasserting Moscow's standing abroad.
The
65-year-old former KGB officer used an otherwise lacklustre
presidential campaign to emphasise Russia's role as a major world power,
boasting of its "invincible" new nuclear weapons in a pre-election
speech.
Most people who spoke to AFP
on Sunday said they voted for Putin, praising him for restoring
stability and national pride after the humiliating collapse of the
Soviet Union.
"Of course I'm for Putin, he's a leader," said Olga Matyunina, a 65-year-old retired economist.
"After he brought Crimea back, he became a hero to me."
Sunday
marked four years since Putin signed a treaty declaring Crimea to be
part of Russia in a move that triggered a pro-Kremlin insurgency in east
Ukraine, a conflict that has claimed more than 10,000 lives.
SPAT
Ahead
of the vote, a new crisis broke out with the West as Britain implicated
Putin in the poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal with a
Soviet-designed nerve agent.
In
response, London expelled 23 Russian diplomats, prompting a tit-for-tat
move by Moscow. Also this week, Washington hit Russia with sanctions for
trying to influence the 2016 US election.
After
his victory, Putin dismissed claims Russia was behind the poisoning in
Britain as "drivel, rubbish, nonsense" but said Moscow was ready to
cooperate with London in the probe.
Putin's
previous Kremlin term was marked by a crackdown on the opposition after
huge protests, the Ukraine conflict, military intervention in Syria and
the introduction of Western sanctions that contributed to a fall in
living standards.
The president has
said he will use his fourth term to address a litany of domestic
problems including widespread poverty and poor healthcare.
Election
officials flew to far-flung regions to collect votes from indigenous
herders, while cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov — the only Russian currently
aboard the International Space Station — cast his ballot by proxy.
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