Putin votes online in Russian elections taking place in annexed areas of Ukraine

Putin votes online in Russian elections taking place in annexed areas of Ukraine

The President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, voted online today in the Russian regional and local elections, which are also taking place in the Ukrainian provinces occupied and annexed during the invasion, and urged citizens to follow his example and participate in the elections.

“I ask the inhabitants of the regions where the elections are being held to participate,” Putin said in a video broadcast by the Kremlin, in which he appears sitting in front of a computer in his office.

“I hope that each of you will show a responsible civil attitude,” stressed the Kremlin leader, before voting online, the AFP news agency reported.

Regional and local elections in Russia, organized to appoint governors, regional deputies and municipal representatives, began yesterday and will end tomorrow to allow the maximum number of voters to vote, according to authorities.

Online voting is also possible in several regions, including the capital Moscow.

The first results should be announced on Sunday evening, according to the central electoral commission.

This year, Russia also organized the vote in Ukrainian provinces that it has occupied since the invasion and in the annexed Crimean peninsula, in an attempt to reinforce its control over territories that it does not yet fully control, which was denounced by Ukraine.

The votes take place in Donetsk and Lugansk, in the Donbass region and under Russian control since September 2022, and Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, where the largest nuclear power plant in Europe is located, as well as in Crimea, annexed in 2014.

Currently, Russia maintains an occupation of almost 20% of Ukrainian territory, including the Crimean peninsula, almost all of Lugansk and a part of Donetsk, in the east, and areas of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, in the south.

Voters are expected to elect regional legislatures, which in turn will appoint regional governors, and in Donetsk and Luhansk provinces thousands of candidates are also vying for seats in dozens of local councils.

For some residents of Donetsk and Luhansk provinces, which have been in the hands of pro-Russian separatists since 2014, there is nothing unusual about the vote, but the picture is different in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, where Ukrainian locals and activists say election workers make visits to homes accompanied by armed soldiers and claim to know little about the candidates.

Source: Ambito

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