Screen grab of alleged ballot-stuffing.
Opposition leaders called for a second round of mass demonstrations in Moscow on Tuesday, to protest against last weekend’s parliamentary election amid widespread claims of irregularities favouring Vladimir Putin’s United Russia party. Our Observer on the ground, who participated in Sunday’s election as an observer for an opposition party, described what he witnessed once the polls closed and counting began.
On Monday, President Dmitry Medvedev hailed the vote as "fair, honest and democratic" as official results revealed that the ruling United Russia party had lost a total of 77 seats in the State Duma, barely hanging on to its majority.
Although the results were largely interpreted as a sign of Putin and his party’s waning popularity, the prime minister – who hopes to resume his role at the helm of the country in Russia’s 2012 presidential elections – dismissed the poll’s significance, noting that United Russia still had enough of a majority to pass most legislation without seeking outside support.
Yet many who participated in Sunday’s elections claim support for Putin was grossly inflated by election fraud at all levels of the vote. These allegations were later backed up by
European election monitors, who said the vote count was “characterized by frequent procedural violations and instances of apparent manipulation, including several serious indications of ballot box stuffing”.
As anger grew over the results,
thousands turned out in Moscow on Monday evening to protest against the prime minister’s 12-year-reign, demanding a “Russia without Putin”. Police arrested at least 300 people at the demonstration, according to media reports.
To prove the elections were largely rigged, a number of voters took to social networking websites, where they posted a deluge of videos claiming to have captured incidents of fraud.
Erasable ink
Video posted on YouTube by yupych.
In this video, the cameraman does a tour of voting booths at a polling station, where he demonstrates that pens provided to mark ballots contain erasable ink.
Falsified ballots
This video shows the head of a polling station falsifying ballots. According to media reports, the head of Moscow’s City Elections Commission confirmed the contents of this video, and announced that Russian authorities had opened an investigation into the incident.
Carrousel voting
This video purports to show a student engaging in “carrousel” or “merry-go-round” voting, when the same person votes several times at different polling stations in exchange for money. In the video, the cameraman explains that he was given the opportunity to make 4,000 rubles (around 96 euros) in exchange for casting 45 ballots for United Russia at multiple different polling stations.
On the day of the election, he and three other students meet a young man, who explains to them that they will flash a picture of a partially eaten apple to local election officials as a sign to show that they are there to cast multiple votes.
In the video, the student films himself as he receives instructions from his handler, who explains how to re-cast the same ballot multiple times. At 2’45”, the student films himself voting at multiple different polling places. However, he specifies in the video that he quit before completing the 45 votes he was ordered to do.
Below standard ballot boxes
In this video, a representative of the opposition Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR) shows that the polling station’s ballot box is not up to standard by pulling at the sides where the box’s flaps are not securely taped shut.
A local election official replies by saying the box had been approved by the election commission. He continues to goad her, at one point exclaiming that the gap can be opened at least 10 cm wide. Eventually, tape is brought out to seal the box’s edges, but the LDPR representative and the local election official continue to argue.
Ballot-stuffing
This video claims to show that ballot boxes are already stuffed before voting even begins. In the clip, the cameraman reports that he can see stacks of votes at the bottom of the ballot box, five minutes before the polling station opens. He gives the time as five minutes to eight in the morning - he flashes his watch face to confirm this.
He then summons a local election official, and asks her if she can see the ballots sealed inside the box. She replies that she sees nothing. He then argues that everyone else can see them, and tries to convince security at the polling station to intervene. When the cameraman realises they don’t intend to help him, he says in a sarcastic tone “Great!”
Comments
Still confused on how that
Submitted by Anony Mouse (not verified) on Wed, 07/12/2011 - 09:34.Still confused on how that whole "democracy" thing works, huh?
Holy shit you are
Submitted by 123123 (not verified) on Wed, 07/12/2011 - 08:19.Holy shit you are brainwashed! So the entire election system MUST be a scam in order for Russia to be safe? thats the only way?? Not by voting in who you think is best and changing the country that way, but by letting Putin steal elections and make a sham of the democratic process, thats all? The only way?
Asking for trouble
Submitted by Aware (not verified) on Wed, 07/12/2011 - 08:14.I live in Florida, and things have been no better here for the last decade. People don't care enough to stop and demand representation from their government. I am ashamed to live in the very state where this: http://www.wordwiz72.com/vote2000.html , happened. Mind you, now that our country has only now created 1.5 million new jobs for the 8 million lost since 2008, people are suddenly protesting. Show people how this will affect their income, their livelihood, their families, and then they may begin to care. Keep up the good work, it's good to know others care about the future state of this worlds government.
Admiration for your effort to
Submitted by Anonymeeee (not verified) on Wed, 07/12/2011 - 03:49.Admiration for your effort to catalog a pattern of cheating. I hope you are safe.
Never put up with fraud.
Submitted by Tim Larkin (not verified) on Wed, 07/12/2011 - 02:06.If fraudulent elections continue, you do not have a country. You must continue to speak out against this!
elections
Submitted by undurigo (not verified) on Wed, 07/12/2011 - 13:30.We must also control the financing of the parties that take place from abroad, in which Hillary Clinton is very active, as she did in Iran and in Irak in order to support her candidate
In any case one cannot put up with rigged elections, they must be fair by all accounts