Exclusive: At a Russian polling station,
phantom voters cast ballots for the 'Tsar'
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[September 12, 2017]
VLADIKAVKAZ/
IVNYA, Russia (Reuters)
- At polling station no. 333 in the Russian city of Vladikavkaz, Reuters
reporters only counted 256 voters casting their ballots in a regional
election on Sunday.
People were voting across Russia in what is seen as a dress rehearsal
for next year's presidential vote. Kremlin candidates for regional
parliaments and governorships performed strongly nationwide.
When the official results for polling station no. 333 were declared, the
turnout was first given as 1,331 before being revised up to 1,867 on
Tuesday. That is more than seven times higher than the number of voters
counted by Reuters - with 73 percent of the votes going to United
Russia, the party of President Vladimir Putin.
Election officials at the polling station said their tally was correct
and there were no discrepancies.
Reuters reporters were there when the polls opened at 08:00 until after
the official count had been completed. They saw one man, who said he was
a United Russia election observer, approaching the ballot box multiple
times and each time putting inside voting papers.
“We must ensure 85 percent for United Russia. Otherwise, the Tsar will
stop providing us with money,” the man, Sergei Lyutikov, told a
reporter, in an apparent reference to Putin.
Putin is the strong favorite to win re-election next year. Many voters
credit him with restoring national pride. However, with the economy
forecast to grow only 1 percent this year enthusiasm for Putin is not as
strong as it has been. Political analysts say that could result in a
weak election turnout.
Reuters reporters observed the vote at six polling stations on Sunday.
At all six the reporters found discrepancies, of varying sizes, between
the official vote tally and the number of voters the reporters counted.
The reporters were present for the entire voting day except for in one
place where a reporter missed the start because they were initially not
allowed in.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov did not immediately respond to requests
for comments for this story.
However, Peskov, on a conference call with reporters on Monday, said the
vote showed people trust Putin. He said that there was "zero tolerance"
of fraud, with reports of violations of election rules being dealt with
swiftly.
Citing election commission data, he said the volume of complaints were
down on previous elections, and in most cases the complaints were about
secondary issues.
United Russia's party headquarters, in a statement sent to Reuters, said
it gave no orders to anyone to stuff ballots or falsify results. It said
all violations would be examined by election commissions and, if the law
was broken, those responsible would be punished.
The six polling stations the Reuters reporters visited were in three
regions but there were thousands of polling stations operating in Russia
on Sunday so the events only offer a small snapshot of what happened.
Reuters reporters are unable to assess if such practices were
widespread, or whether they had a material bearing on the outcome of the
election.
Opinion polls consistently show that United Russia has more support than
any other Russian party.
Golos, a non-governmental organization whose volunteers monitored the
voting in 36 regions, said late on Monday it had received reports of 825
violations of election rules. They included multiple reports of inflated
turnout figures and ballot-stuffing. However, the NGO said violations
were down compared to previous elections.
Russia's central election commission, asked about the discrepancies
witnessed by Reuters did not immediately respond.
Ella Pamfilova, chair of the commission, told a news conference after
polls closed that the irregularities that had been reported to her
commission would be investigated.
THREATS
At polling station no. 333, located in a further education college in
Vladikavkaz, capital of the North Ossetia region, voters on Sunday were
electing a new regional parliament.
Lyutikov was there throughout the day. He works as an aide to Vadim
Suanov, a United Russia deputy in the outgoing North Ossetia regional
legislature, according to the legislature's website. Suanov, who was
running for re-election on Sunday, told Reuters he knew nothing about
what his employee did in the polling station.
[to top of second column] |
Sergei Lyutikov (C), who said he was an election observer of United
Russia party, stands near a ballot box at a polling station during a
regional election in Vladikavkaz, the capital of North Ossetia,
Russia September 10, 2017. REUTERS/Vladimir Soldatkin
Lyutikov cast his ballot in the first hours of voting but later
inserted ballot papers about 10 times, according to the Reuters
witnesses.
Lyutikov told a Reuters reporter not to document him at the ballot
box, threatening to break her mobile phone if the pictures and video
footage were not deleted. At one point, he showed a reporter his
passport, with his name, Sergei Ivanovich Lyutikov and his date of
birth, April 17 1984.
While he was approaching the ballot box, he was in sight of Yelena
Khadonova, the chair of the election commission for polling station
no.333.
Asked about Lyutikov's actions, she said: “I have nothing to comment
on. I haven’t seen anything.”
HOME VOTING
At a parliamentary election last September, Reuters reporters at
several polling stations found cases of inflated turnout and
ballot-stuffing. Russia election chiefs said they would investigate,
and the police launched their own investigation.
After Sunday's vote, Kremlin candidates were on track to win in all
16 regions where governors were being elected, according to
preliminary results. In the six regions where parliaments were being
elected, including in North Ossetia, United Russia was in
comfortable first place.
United Russia was less dominant in municipal elections in parts of
Moscow, where support for opposition candidates is traditionally
stronger.
At another location, polling station no. 618 in Belgorod region, a
Reuters reporter accompanied election officials on their visits to
voters' houses to administer home voting. The number of home voters
was equal to about a quarter of those who voted at the polling
station.
Under Russia's electoral rules, voting at home is reserved for cases
where a voter has specifically requested a visit, because for health
reasons they are unable to make it to a polling station.
Kremlin opponents and independent monitors say home voting is open
to abuse because it is not subject to the same scrutiny as voting in
a polling station, where monitors from several parties, and
journalists, are often present.
Despite the rule that home voting is only offered on request,
several of the people visited by the election officials at their
homes said they had not asked to vote at home.
The election officials entered most of houses without knocking on
the door. One man in his sixties was smoking a cigarette in his
backyard when the election officials arrived.
"First build a road and then we'll talk," he told the officials,
pointing at a bumpy path leading to his house. He denied he asked
them to come, but still cast his vote.
The officials said a relative or neighbor may have made the request
on his behalf.
Over the course of two hours, during which the reporter was with the
officials at all times, they collected 14 filled ballot papers. When
the officials returned to the polling station, they had 18 filled
ballot papers.
The officials who made the trip said the tally was correct. The head
of the election commission at polling station no. 618, Lyubov
Grushko, said: "The difference in numbers is a provocative issue, we
won't discuss it."
(Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin, Kevin O'Flynn and Gabrielle
Tetrault-Farber in VLADIKAVKAZ, Maria Tsvetkova Gleb Stolyarov and
Olesya Astakhova in SASOVO and Anton Zverev, Anastasiya Lyrchikova
and Darya Korsunskaya in IVNYA; Writing by Maria Tsvetkova and
Christian Lowe; Editing by Anna Willard)
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