Sunday, December 4, 2011

Russia voted on Sunday


Russia voted on Sunday in a landmark parliamentary election,  PM Vladimir Putin's party was expected to win but with reduced margin.

 Nearly 100,000 polling stations opened on Sunday at 8 AM local time in the vast
Russians vote Sunday in parliamentary elections to test the country's trust in Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his ruling party amid growing impatience with corrupt and ineffective government.Putin's United Russia party was expected to fare poorer than it did four years ago but nonetheless was considered likely to retain a majority in the next State Duma, the lower chamber of the Russian parliament.More than 7,000 journalists, including 389 foreign reporters, from 4,000 media are covering the elections, the Central Election Commission said.
The first exit poll data are due to be released as the last polling stations close, with initial official results expected in the early hours of Monday.A total of 110 million Russian citizens, including 2 million expatriats scattered around the world, are eligible to vote in Sunday’s election to fill the 450 seats of the State Duma for the next five years, according to the Central Election Commission.
Reports RIA NOVOSTI
Eurasian country spread over 9 time zones and are scheduled to continue till 8 PM local time to elect the sixth post-Soviet parliament, expected to hand victory to Putin's United Russia party but with reduced margin.
Amid reports of numerous violations and ballot rigging, 110 million Russians, including those in India, voted for the lower house of parliament, the 450-deputy State Duma, a poll seen as a dry run of 4th March presidential polls in which current Prime Minister Putin is expected to swap roles with President Dmitry Medvedev.Russia opened a polling station in Goa to enable its citizens to cast their vote to elect the State Duma -- lower house of the Parliament.There are over 10,000 Russian citizens holidaying or living in the popular Indian resort.More polling stations for the Russian nationals opened in the country's embassy in New Delhi and consulates in Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata.
Independent Election watchdog Golos (Voice) complained of 'massive cyber attacks' on its website alleging violations.It claimed rampant violations in the campaign and said its "Map of Violations" website documenting reports of fraud was inaccessible due a cyber-attack and its email was paralysed.
Meanwhile, seven political parties are competing for representation in the Duma election but public opinion polls suggest that only four of them, United Russia, A Just Russia, the Communists and the Liberal Democratic Party, are expected to cross 7 percent threshold to get seats in the State Duma.
Opinion polls indicate that the election results could water down the strength of the country's dominant party.
As about 3,500 the polling booths opened at 930 IST in Moscow, which has over seven million registered voters, numerous reports of alleged violation and ballot rigging started to pour in from the regions where voting was already underway.
The poll is being observed by about 700 international observers, including India's Chief Election Commissioner SYC Quraishi.
The Communist Party alleged that its observers were not allowed inside the polling stations in Saratov (Volga region) and the ruling United Russia had organised 'rotating' voting by ferrying students in buses to several times cast ballots at different polling stations.
The liberal websites of Radio Ekho Moskvy (Moscow Echo), Slon.ru and 'Golos' came under DDOS attack and were not accessible."The attack on the website on election day is clearly an attempt to inhibit the publication of information about violations," Moscow Echo editor-in-chief Alexei Venediktov wrote on Twitter.
The ruling United Russia, whose performance at the present poll will a litmus-test of Putin's popularity, reported that its office in the western city of Bryansk was attacked by Molotov cocktail and caught fire.President Medvedev, who is leading the United Russia to poll, came to a polling station in west Moscow with his wife Svetlana to cast his vote.
Putin also cast his ballot at the polling station at Kosygin Street, where he is officially registered as resident.Even as Putin, the 59-year-old ex-KGB spy remains ahead of most politician in popularity chart, there are growing indications that some Russians may be wearying of his cultivated strongman image.The failure to win a two-thirds majority would strip the ruling party of the constitutional majority which allows it to amend the constitution.
The poll outcome in which besides United Russia six more parties are in the fray, will also be crucial for Medvedev, who under the deal with Putin, will become his prime minister in May after March 2012 presidential polls, surely to be won by Putin.
According to Russia's Central Election Commission (CEC), about half a million observers from competing parties are monitoring the vote to make sure there are no violations by their rivals. 
Media agencies

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