The opposition calls for a massive vote against Vladimir Putin at midday.

Russians vote on Sunday March 17 for the third and final day of a tailor-made ballot intended to triumphantly re-elect the current president, the opposition having been eradicated and the Kremlin presenting national unity as a patriotic duty, in full assault against Ukraine.

Critics of the Russian president, who has been in charge of the country for 24 years, will nevertheless try to make themselves heard, despite warnings from the authorities, by calling on their supporters to come and vote en masse at midday. 

Initial estimates and the results of a survey by a state institute, Vtsiom, should be known shortly after the closing of the last polling stations at 7 p.m. GMT in the Kaliningrad enclave.

The outcome of the vote is in no doubt, the opposition to Vladimir Putin having been decimated by years of repression which has further accelerated with the conflict in Ukraine, the backdrop to these elections.

The entire week was marked by deadly strikes and attempted armed incursions from Ukraine into Russian territory.

On Sunday, a new drone attack blamed on Ukraine caused a fire at a refinery in southern Russia, with regional authorities reporting one death after a heart attack.

Vladimir Putin swore revenge on Friday, while these attacks come in response to the daily bombing of Ukraine by Russia since February 24, 2022.

The master of the Kremlin, who can count on very real popularity, sees the election as a demonstration of unity of the Russians behind him.

“We must confirm our unity and determination to move forward,” he insisted on Thursday, deeming it “critical not to turn away from the path”, the country being, in his mind, the target of a war hatched by the West.

The opposition at noon

A vision shared by many of his compatriots.

“The actions that the West inflicts on us only further unite the Russian people,” swears to AFP Lyubov Piankova, a 70-year-old retiree from Saint Petersburg, the head of state's hometown.

Vladimir Putin's main critics are dead, in prison or in exile, a repression which culminated with the mysterious death of Alexei Navalny in a prison in a remote region of the Russian Arctic.

If the opponents have no chance of influencing the vote, they nevertheless want to show that they exist, as during Navalny's funeral when crowds paid tribute to him in Moscow.

Yulia Navalnaïa, who despite her exile promised to take up the torch from her late husband, called on her supporters to go to the polls at the same time, at noon on Sunday (9 a.m. GMT), and give their vote to any other candidate. than Putin.

Also read: Alexeï Navalny: a look back at the career of Vladimir Putin's number one opponent

A young resident of Moscow, who preferred to remain anonymous for security reasons, told AFP that he would go to vote at that time "just to see positive young faces around me" and to see "the light in this dark tunnel.

Authorities in the capital have warned against any form of protest.

The young man interviewed by AFP, however, said he was calm, because the action in which he will participate "does not violate any law".

The first days of voting went off without a hitch, apart from a few isolated incidents: paint poured into ballot boxes, attempted fires, etc. But the precise reasons for these acts were not revealed.

Several of their perpetrators were imprisoned.

Incursions from Ukraine by Russian anti-Putin units

Regarding Ukraine, while the conflict has probably cost the lives of tens of thousands of Russian soldiers, Moscow strives to triumphantly present recent conquests, although of limited importance, and to emphasize that the Russia is at stake for its survival against the West. 

All week, the Russian army also said it was repelling attempted armed incursions from neighboring Ukraine in the Belgorod and Kursk regions, assaults claimed by anti-Putin units claiming to be composed of Russians.

Again on Saturday, one of these groups, "Russia's Freedom Legion", called on civilians to evacuate the city of Belgorod: "you do not have to be Putin's human shields." 

Several people have died in these regions in recent days in addition to drone, rocket and artillery attacks, even if Russian anti-aircraft defense seems able to shoot down most of the projectiles.

The Russian army said on Sunday that it had destroyed 35 Ukrainian drones flying over several regions of Russia, including Moscow, during the night, a particularly high figure.

An official of the occupation in southern Ukraine, Vladimir Rogov, also accused the Kiev army of attacking a polling station in the Zaporizhia region using drones, causing a fire but not causing no casualties.

Moscow, for its part, continues its bombing of Ukraine.

Strike killed 21 people in Odessa on Friday

With AFP

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