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Echo Musky: Russian
Election Violations Include Cyber Attacks
December 5, 2011
Russian
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's ruling party has suffered surprisingly
steep losses in parliamentary elections, giving the man who has
dominated politics there for more than a decade a much reduced majority.
With 96 percent of the vote counted Monday, United Russia looked set to
win 238 seats in the 450-seat State Duma, or lower house, down sharply
from the 315 seats it had secured in 2007 elections.
Election monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe [OSCE] reported many violations of election rules favoring the
United Russia party. The OSCE says frequent procedural violations
included problems with the vote-counting, ballot-box stuffing and a lack
of fairness. Even so, the projected results show Putin's party losing
the more than two-thirds of the parliamentary supermajority that has
given United Russia the ability to change the constitution unilaterally.
Photo Gallery: Russia votes
U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton on Monday expressed "serious
concerns" about the conduct of Russia's parliamentary elections. She
said Russian voters deserve a full investigation so they know the
election was held fairly and that their votes were cast and counted
honestly.
Medvedev cites 'honest, fair' poll
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said the elections were honest and
fair. "United Russia gained exactly what it has, no more and no less
than that. In that sense, they were absolutely honest and fair," he
said.
The Communists, along with the nationalist Liberal Democrats and Just
Russia - a social democratic party - all made strong gains, meaning that
Putin's party will be forced to work with at least some of the country's
newly empowered opposition. The Communist Party took 92 seats, followed
by Just Russia with 64 and the Liberal Democrats with 56.
The Central Election Commission said Monday that United Russia had
garnered 49.5 percent of the ballots cast, compared with 64 percent in
2007. Gennadi Zyuganov's Communist Party is running a distant second
with just under 20 percent, up from 12 percent four years ago.
Questions around party's dominance
Russian analysts in recent weeks predicted a sharp decline in the ruling
party's popularity, with voters voicing discontent about the growing
income gap between Russia's rich and poor, and allegations of official
corruption.
In remarks late Sunday, Putin said voters had reaffirmed United Russia
as "the nation's leading political force" and that the result would
"ensure [the country's] stable development."
Earlier, police detained more than 100 opposition activists during a
demonstration in Moscow. Dozens more were arrested in St. Petersburg.
Also Sunday, Russia's only independent election monitor, Golos, said
police had blocked some of its poll watchers from their posts around the
nation.
Opposition news sites hacked
Additionally,
Oleos and the popular Russian opposition radio station, Echo Musky, said
their websites were hacked, making them inaccessible. Several opposition
news sites also were not working.
Oleos said it has compiled more than 5,300 complaints of election law
violations, and it accused the ruling party of complicity in most of
them.
Last week, Putin, the current prime minister, formally accepted his
party's nomination to return to the presidency - a post that analysts
say he is certain to win. He announced his intentions in September,
confirming a deal under which he would appoint President Medvedev as his
prime minister.
The planned job swap has angered many in Russia, who said it would
strengthen authoritarian rule and clear the way for Putin to become
Russia's longest-serving leader since communist times.
If he regains the presidency, the 59-year-old Putin could serve two more
six-year terms and remain in power until 2024. He was first elected
president in 2000. |