最新消息:普金成功当选新一届俄罗斯总统

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/04/29 00:57:13
普金支持率已经达到法定的50%以上,即62.5%

普金成为新一届俄罗斯总统

Mr Putin won 58.3 per cent of the vote, enough to avoid a second-round runoff, an exit poll from the state controlled All-Russian Public Opinion Research Center (VTsIOM) showed.

An different exit poll, from the Public Opinion Foundation (FOM), showed Mr Putin won 59.3 per cent of the vote. Official results from most polling stations will be published on Monday.

Election observers and opposition politicians reported widespread legal violations at polling stations across the country as Russians cast their ballots.

Several hundred thousand observers affiliated to the five candidates are monitoring the vote as citizens made their choice at 95,000 stations in regions spreading across ten time zones.

Mr Putin had been expected to win by a large margin, but h has been unsettled by mass street protests against his rule over the last three months.

Within two hours of polls opening in Moscow at 8am, Twitter and other social media were flooded with reports of suspected "carousel voting": a ploy widely used during disputed parliamentary elections in December in which organised groups of people vote at several different polling stations using the same absentee ballots.

The reports of falsifications remain so far unconfirmed, although bloggers posted photographs and videos of large groups of people arriving simultaneously at stations to vote.

Before the vote, election monitors had warned that many polling stations had run out of absentee ballots, indicating they might be used in fraud, possibly by Mr Putin's supporters.

Activists from the Democratic Choice NGO put up footage on Sunday which showed them infiltrating a group recruited online who were allegedly offered money to ride by bus to a polling station where they received a ballot to vote on an "extra list".

Rosvybory, a monitoring organisation run by the anti-corruption blogger and protest leader Alexei Navalny, claimed to have recorded 2,500 violations of electoral law by early afternoon. One case involved voters being paid to cast their ballot.

Navalny tweeted: "We, of course, expected carousels, but not on this scale."

Observers also reported being illegally removed by police or election officials from several polling stations.

Moscow's election chief, Valentin Gorbunov, denied the reports of carousel voting and said that factories were providing transport for their workers to polling stations, which was not illegal.

Mr Putin, 59, who was president from 2000 to 2008, voted alongside his wife Lyudmila at a polling station inside the Russian Academy of Sciences. Three topless activists from the Ukrainian group, Femen, staged a brief protest after he had left. They cried "Putin thief" and one of the women had "I steal for Putin" written across her chest.

Mr Putin's four opponents are communist Gennady Zyuganov, former Putin ally Sergei Mironov, billionaire tycoon Mikhail Prokhorov and ultranationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, none of whom pose a substantial threat.

The leaders of the opposition movement, who have been systematically marginalised from mainstream politics, will hold protests against Mr Putin's rule in the capital on Monday.

Analysts say Mr Putin has a large chunk of genuine support, especially among older and provincial voters, but that election results are skewed in his favour because of overwhelmingly unfair media coverage, black PR against his opponents, and fraud at the ballot box.

Security was tight on Sunday in central Moscow, with police officers lining the streets. Pro-Putin supporters were already erecting a stage near the Kremlin where they are expected to celebrate early reports of his victory in the evening.
普金支持率已经达到法定的50%以上,即62.5%

普金成为新一届俄罗斯总统

Mr Putin won 58.3 per cent of the vote, enough to avoid a second-round runoff, an exit poll from the state controlled All-Russian Public Opinion Research Center (VTsIOM) showed.

An different exit poll, from the Public Opinion Foundation (FOM), showed Mr Putin won 59.3 per cent of the vote. Official results from most polling stations will be published on Monday.

Election observers and opposition politicians reported widespread legal violations at polling stations across the country as Russians cast their ballots.

Several hundred thousand observers affiliated to the five candidates are monitoring the vote as citizens made their choice at 95,000 stations in regions spreading across ten time zones.

Mr Putin had been expected to win by a large margin, but h has been unsettled by mass street protests against his rule over the last three months.

Within two hours of polls opening in Moscow at 8am, Twitter and other social media were flooded with reports of suspected "carousel voting": a ploy widely used during disputed parliamentary elections in December in which organised groups of people vote at several different polling stations using the same absentee ballots.

The reports of falsifications remain so far unconfirmed, although bloggers posted photographs and videos of large groups of people arriving simultaneously at stations to vote.

Before the vote, election monitors had warned that many polling stations had run out of absentee ballots, indicating they might be used in fraud, possibly by Mr Putin's supporters.

Activists from the Democratic Choice NGO put up footage on Sunday which showed them infiltrating a group recruited online who were allegedly offered money to ride by bus to a polling station where they received a ballot to vote on an "extra list".

Rosvybory, a monitoring organisation run by the anti-corruption blogger and protest leader Alexei Navalny, claimed to have recorded 2,500 violations of electoral law by early afternoon. One case involved voters being paid to cast their ballot.

Navalny tweeted: "We, of course, expected carousels, but not on this scale."

Observers also reported being illegally removed by police or election officials from several polling stations.

Moscow's election chief, Valentin Gorbunov, denied the reports of carousel voting and said that factories were providing transport for their workers to polling stations, which was not illegal.

Mr Putin, 59, who was president from 2000 to 2008, voted alongside his wife Lyudmila at a polling station inside the Russian Academy of Sciences. Three topless activists from the Ukrainian group, Femen, staged a brief protest after he had left. They cried "Putin thief" and one of the women had "I steal for Putin" written across her chest.

Mr Putin's four opponents are communist Gennady Zyuganov, former Putin ally Sergei Mironov, billionaire tycoon Mikhail Prokhorov and ultranationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, none of whom pose a substantial threat.

The leaders of the opposition movement, who have been systematically marginalised from mainstream politics, will hold protests against Mr Putin's rule in the capital on Monday.

Analysts say Mr Putin has a large chunk of genuine support, especially among older and provincial voters, but that election results are skewed in his favour because of overwhelmingly unfair media coverage, black PR against his opponents, and fraud at the ballot box.

Security was tight on Sunday in central Moscow, with police officers lining the streets. Pro-Putin supporters were already erecting a stage near the Kremlin where they are expected to celebrate early reports of his victory in the evening.
意料之中。。。


第一,LZ请给链接。

第二,看了一下原文。原文说的是Exit Poll显示普京获得胜利,最终统计结果并没有出来。

所以LZ最好改一下标题。

第一,LZ请给链接。

第二,看了一下原文。原文说的是Exit Poll显示普京获得胜利,最终统计结果并没有出来。

所以LZ最好改一下标题。
普沙皇登帝
沙皇登基,先恭喜一个。顺便想向沙皇兄提个请求,能给个漂亮的毛妹纸不
普皇再次登基!
老普当了这一界再连一界问题不大。北极熊咆哮的年代到了
意料之中啊...