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Putin Romps to Victory in Kremlin Vote

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  • Putin Romps to Victory in Kremlin Vote

    Putin Romps to Victory in Kremlin Vote

    Presidential elections in Russia (2012)

    © RIA Novosti. Alexei Nikolskiy
    22:17 04/03/2012
    MOSCOW, March 4 (Marc Bennetts, RIA Novosti)


    Vladimir Putin secured a third term in the Kremlin on Sunday after
    recording a resounding victory at Russia's presidential elections.

    Exit polls gave Putin almost 60 percent of the vote. His nearest
    rival, Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov, took 17.7 percent,
    state pollster VTsIOM said.

    `I can not recognize these elections as fair, honest and worthy,'
    Zyuganov said. "I see no reason to congratulate anyone."

    No other candidate gained more than 10 percent. Turnout was just over
    56 percent, election officials said.

    Some 110,000 Putin supporters celebrated near Red Square as the
    results of exit polls were released, police said.


    "He's an ideal president!" a young woman said at the celebration,
    which was shown live on state television.

    The first preliminary official results are expected by midnight Sunday
    (20:00 GMT) or in the early hours Monday.

    New President

    Putin, 59, will be inaugurated as new president in May and will serve
    for six years, not four as previously. Putin was Russia's president
    between 2000 and 2008, but was forced to step down by the
    Constitution, when he handed over to his hand-picked successor, Dmitry
    Medvedev.


    © RIA Novosti.
    Russian presidential elections

    The elections took place to the backdrop of mass demonstrations that
    were triggered by allegations of vote fraud in favor of Putin's United
    Russia party at December's parliamentary polls.

    None of the candidates opposing Putin represented the burgeoning
    protest movement, although all have - to some extent - expressed
    sympathy with its demands, which include a rerun of last year's vote.

    There was a heavy police presence in downtown Moscow, with trucks full
    of riot police parked near major metro stations. Major protests
    against Putin's re-election are expected for Monday evening.

    Zyuganov urged earlier protesters "to show restraint and comply with the law."

    VOTING
    Putin voted earlier on Sunday with his wife, Lyudmila, at a polling
    station at the Russian Academy of Sciences.

    "I had a good sleep, did some exercise, and then came here," he said.
    "I'm hoping for a good turnout, of course."

    Shortly after Putin left, topless activists with the words "I steal
    for Putin" painted on their breasts burst into the polling station
    shouting anti-government slogans. The women - who said they were from
    the Ukrainian Femen protest group - were detained by police.

    Election officials said no major violations have taken place at the vote.

    But Russia's largest independent election watchdog, Golos, listed on
    its website almost 3,000 violations. These could not be independently
    verified.

    Putin had ordered web cameras installed at 91,000 of Russia's 96,000
    polling stations in an attempt to prevent the elections being marred
    by more vote fraud allegations.

    Almost 700 international observers are in Russia to monitor the
    elections, including from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, the Commonwealth of Independent States
    Council's International Assembly, and the Parliamentary Assembly of
    the Council of Europe.

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