Putin set to reclaim Kremlin despite protests

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Russians voted on Sunday in an election set to send strongman Vladimir Putin back to the Kremlin but which the opposition said was marred by fraud and would be followed by mass protests against his rule.
Observers scrutinising the polls and opposition parties said there were clear signs of foul play in the election, including multiple voting, despite the installation on Putin’s orders of webcams to ensure transparency. Voters from Vladivostok on the Pacific to the Kaliningrad exclave on the Baltic cast their ballots in the marathon 21-hour election process in which victory for 59-year-old ex-KGB spy Putin appears certain. The main suspense is not the final result but whether Putin — who has spent the past four years as Russia’s premier — can win easily in the first round against his four rivals, and if the protests will be a serious challenge.
Putting on a trademark show of confidence as he cast his vote in Moscow in a rare appearance with his wife Lyudmila, Putin boasted that he had come “straight from sport” and had not been in touch with his campaign headquarters.
With voting passed halfway in European Russia, turnout was already over 47.6 percent, the election commission said, indicating a higher turnout than in December’s parliamentary polls.