Legality of Navalny call for poll boycott should be vetted – Kremlin

Russia’s top election body rules to formally bar anti-corruption crusader

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny gestures while speaking at the Russia’s Central Election commission in Moscow, Russia, yesterday. Russian election officials have formally barred him from running for president. Photograph: Evgeny Feldman/Navalny Campaign/AP
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny gestures while speaking at the Russia’s Central Election commission in Moscow, Russia, yesterday. Russian election officials have formally barred him from running for president. Photograph: Evgeny Feldman/Navalny Campaign/AP

Russian officials should review opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s calls for an election boycott to see if they might be breaking the law, the Kremlin has said.

In a widely anticipated decision, Russia’s top election body ruled on Monday to formally bar anti-corruption crusader Mr Navalny from running in the presidential election next March.

Mr Navalny promptly put out a video statement, saying the ban shows President Vladimir "Putin is terribly scared and is afraid of running against me", and called on his supporters to stay away from the vote in protest.

Mr Putin, who has been in power for 18 years, announced his bid for re-election earlier this month, but so far has refrained from canvassing.

READ SOME MORE

In contrast, his most prominent rival, anti-corruption crusader Mr Navalny has been campaigning aggressively all year, reaching out to the most remote parts of the country.

Opinion polls say Mr Putin likely to win the March vote easily.

Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Tuesday would not comment on the Election Commission's decision to bar Mr Navalny but said the "calls for boycott ought to be carefully studied to see if they are breaking the law".

Suggestions rejected

Mr Peskov also rejected suggestions that Mr Navalny’s absence on the ballot could dent the legitimacy of Mr Putin’s possible re-election.

The Russian law does not state calls for an election boycott are illegal, but authorities last year blocked access to several websites calling for the boycott.

Mr Navalny rose to prominence in 2009 with investigations into official corruption, and became a protest leader when hundreds of thousands took to the streets across Russia in 2011 to protest electoral fraud.

A few years later and after several short-term spells in jail, Mr Navalny faced two separate sets of charges of fraud which were viewed as political retribution aimed to bar him from running for office. In his only official campaign before his first conviction took effect, Mr Navalny garnered 30 per cent of the vote in the race for Moscow mayor in 2013. – AP