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Russia polling stations vandalized as election sure to grant Vladimir Putin a new 6-year term begins

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Moscow — Russian police detained at least eight people Friday for acts of vandalism at polling stations on the first day of voting in presidential elections, officials said. Authorities did not say if the protests were directed against Russia’s longtime leader Vladimir Putin, and state-media reports said voting was “continuing as normal.”

A woman threw a Molotov cocktail at a school being used as a voting station in Saint Petersburg, electoral authorities said. The suspect was in her 20s, and an electoral official said her “unlawful actions were promptly stopped by police officers. No one was injured.”

In Moscow, a video published by the independent SOTA news outlet showed an elderly woman setting a voting booth alight, filling a polling station with smoke before she is detained by police. Another video in the capital showed a woman pouring dye into a ballot box. She was detained and charged with “obstructing the exercise of electoral rights,” investigators said.

russia-elections-vandalism.jpg
An image from surveillance video obtained by Reuters shows an unidentified woman pouring ink into a ballot box on the first day of Russia’s 2024 presidential elections, in Moscow, Russia, March 15, 2024.

Reuters


Four others in the Russian regions of Voronezh, Karachay-Cherkessia and Rostov were also arrested for pouring dye into ballot boxes, officials said. In the remote Siberian region of Khanty-Mansi, a woman was detained for trying to burn a ballot box with a Molotov cocktail, and in Chelyabinsk, police detained a man who tried to set firecrackers off at a polling station, state media said.

An election in the absence of democracy

While the motive remained unclear, the sporadic incidents may have been the death throes of a political opposition that has been all but quashed under the increasingly heavy fist of Russia’s 71-year-old strong-man leader.

Putin’s biggest political rival, longtime dissident and anti-corruption campaigner Alexey Navalny, died in a remote Russian prison a month before the polls opened. Russian officials say he died of natural causes, but his family and allies accuse Putin of having his most vocal critic murdered.


Russians gather to mourn Alexey Navalny

03:33

Virtually every other member of Navalny’s movement, along with anyone who has dared to voice support for it, or anyone or anything else that has challenged Putin’s narrative about Russia’s war in Ukraine, has been killed, locked up or forced into exile.

With protests of virtually any kind barred across Russia and hundreds of would-be candidates excluded from the elections, there was no doubt that Putin would emerge victorious to claim a new six-year term in office. As president or prime minister, Putin has ruled over Russia uninterrupted for almost a quarter of a century already.

Speaking Thursday in Washington, U.S. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said “the Russian people deserve free and fair elections and the ability to choose among candidates representing diverse views. They deserve access to impartial information.”

Miller noted Navalny’s recent death “following years of harassment and abuse,” and said Putin and his government, “continue to deny anti-war candidates registration on spurious grounds and to deprive Russian voters of genuine choices.”

“Sham elections” in Russian-occupied Ukraine as war grinds on

Russians started voting on Friday in the three-day presidential election as fresh attacks brought the raging conflict in Ukraine further into Russian territory. Putin has cast the election as a show of Russians’ loyalty and support for his military assault on the neigboring country, which is now in its third year.


Ukraine vows to keep fighting Russia amid stalled U.S. aid effort

03:37

Voting was taking place at polling stations in a country spread over 11 time zones, and in Russia’s Kaliningrad exclave, wedged between European Union members Poland and Lithuania, as well as in Russian-occupied parts of eastern Ukraine.

“The United States condemns Russia’s continuing efforts to undermine Ukraine’s sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence through sham elections held in occupied Ukrainian territories,” Miller said Thursday at the State Department. “The United States does not and will never recognize the legitimacy or outcome of these sham elections held in sovereign Ukraine as part of Russia’s presidential elections.”

As the voting started on Friday, both Moscow and Kyiv said civilians had been killed in the latest wave of overnight aerial strikes.

“We have already shown that we can be together, defending the freedom, sovereignty and security of Russia,” Putin told his nation, urging Russians to back him in the face of a “difficult period.”

“Today it is critically important not to stray from this path,” he said in a pre-election message broadcast on state TV.

The Kremlin leader’s confidence has been riding high, with his troops recently having secured their first territorial gains in Ukraine in nearly a year and Ukrainian forces desperate for a vital extension of U.S. support currently mired in America’s domestic politics.


Biden administration announces $300 million for Ukraine

19:38

Kyiv launched some of its largest air attacks on Russia this week ahead of the election — some reaching hundreds of miles into Russian territory — and pro-Kyiv guerilla fighters have also launched a series of attempted cross-border raids.

Voters in Belgorod, near the Ukrainian border, were forced to leave a polling station to head to a bomb shelter as authorities issued an air alert and ordered people to take cover, the RIA Novosti state-run news agency reported. Russia’s defense ministry said Ukraine had fired seven rockets at the region.



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Moderate Masoud Pezeshkian wins Iran’s presidential runoff election

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Reformist candidate Masoud Pezeshkian won Iran’s runoff presidential election Saturday, besting hard-liner Saeed Jalili by promising to reach out to the West and ease enforcement on the country’s mandatory headscarf law after years of sanctions and protests squeezing the Islamic Republic.

Pezeshkian promised no radical changes to Iran’s Shiite theocracy in his campaign and long has held Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as the final arbiter of all matters of state in the country. But even Pezeshkian’s modest aims will be challenged by an Iranian government still largely held by hard-liners, the ongoing Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip, and Western fears over Tehran enriching uranium to near-weapons-grade levels.

A vote count offered by authorities put Pezeshkian as the winner with 16.3 million votes to Jalili’s 13.5 million in Friday’s election.

Iran's presidential election goes to run-off
Iranian reformist candidate Masoud Pezeshkian speaks at his rally for the presidential elections in Tehran, Iran, on July 3, 2024.

Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu via Getty Images


Supporters of Pezeshkian, a heart surgeon and longtime lawmaker, entered the streets of Tehran and other cities before dawn to celebrate as his lead grew over Jalili, a hard-line former nuclear negotiator.

But Pezeshkian’s win still sees Iran at a delicate moment, with tensions high in the Mideast over the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip, Iran’s advancing nuclear program, and a looming U.S. election that could put any chance of a detente between Tehran and Washington at risk.

The first round of voting June 28 saw the lowest turnout in the history of the Islamic Republic since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Iranian officials have long pointed to turnout as a sign of support for the country’s Shiite theocracy, which has been under strain after years of sanctions crushing Iran’s economy, mass demonstrations and intense crackdowns on all dissent.

Government officials up to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei predicted a higher participation rate as voting got underway, with state television airing images of modest lines at some polling centers across the country.

However, online videos purported to show some polls empty while a survey of several dozen sites in the capital, Tehran, saw light traffic amid a heavy security presence on the streets.

The election came amid heightened regional tensions. In April, Iran launched its first-ever direct attack on Israel over the war in Gaza, while militia groups that Tehran arms in the region — such as the Lebanese Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthi rebels — are engaged in the fighting and have escalated their attacks.

Iran is also enriching uranium at near weapons-grade levels and maintains a stockpile large enough to build several nuclear weapons, should it choose to do so. And while Khamenei remains the final decision-maker on matters of state, whichever man ends up winning the presidency could bend the country’s foreign policy toward either confrontation or collaboration with the West.

The campaign also repeatedly touched on what would happen if former President Donald Trump, who unilaterally withdrew America from the Iran nuclear deal in 2018, won the November election. Iran has held indirect talks with President Joe Biden’s administration, though there’s been no clear movement back toward constraining Tehran’s nuclear program for the lifting of economic sanctions.

More than 61 million Iranians over the age of 18 were eligible to vote, with about 18 million of them between 18 and 30. Voting was to end at 6 p.m. but was extended until midnight to boost participation.

The late President Ebrahim Raisi, who died in a May helicopter crash, was seen as a protégé of Khamenei and a potential successor as supreme leader.

Still, many knew him for his involvement in the mass executions that Iran conducted in 1988, and for his role in the bloody crackdowns on dissent that followed protests over the 2022 death of Mahsa Amini, a young woman detained by police over allegedly improperly wearing the mandatory headscarf, or hijab.



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Biden set for pivotal 24 hours with primetime interview

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President Biden is set for a make-or-break weekend for his political future as his reelection campaign tries to hit reset following last week’s disastrous debate. Biden again vowed to stay in the race Friday at a campaign rally in the battleground state of Wisconsin, and will sit down for a primetime interview with George Stephanopoulos on ABC News. Scott MacFarlane has the latest.

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