Tearful Putin claims victory in Russian election

Russia»s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin addresses his supporters during a rally at the Manezhnaya Square just outside the Kremlin in Moscow, late on March 4, 2012.
Vladimir Putin claimed victory in Russia’s presidential election Sunday and, tears rolling down his cheeks, said it was a historical turning point that had prevented the country falling into the hands of enemies trying to usurp power.
The prime minister’s opponents said there had been widespread fraud in Sunday’s election. They refused to recognize the results and vowed to press on with the biggest protests since he rose to power 12 years ago.
But the former KGB spy was triumphant, and unusually emotional, after exit polls and partial results suggested he would win about 60 percent of the vote and return to the Kremlin after four years as premier.
«I promised you we would win. We have won. Glory to Russia,» Putin, dressed in an anorak and flanked by outgoing President Dmitry Medvedev, told tens of thousands of flag-waving supporters late in the evening at a victory rally meters from the red walls of the Kremlin.
Denouncing attempts to «destroy Russia’s statehood and usurp power,» he declared: «The Russian people have shown today that such scenarios will not succeed in our land … They shall not pass!»
It was a defiant and angry speech in which Putin, 59, sounded a clear warning to the mainly middle-class protesters in Moscow and other big cities who have staged huge rallies since a disputed parliamentary poll on December 4.
Putin’s nearest rival, Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov, won only about 18 percent of votes, according to exit polls by a state pollster and a polling group that has proved reliable in the past.
Nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, ex-parliamentary speaker Sergei Mironov and billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov were all forecast to win less than 10 percent, although Prokhorov won plaudits for a relatively strong campaign.
Zyuganov said his party would not recognize the official results and called the election «illegitimate, dishonest and untransparent.» Liberal leader Vladimir Ryzhkov also refused to recognize the result.
The organizers of the anti-Putin protests, which portray him as an autocratic leader whose return to power will stymie any hope of economic and political reforms in Russia, said they would resume their protests Monday.
«The social base of the protest is going to grow and Putin with his team did everything wrong to make this happen. He really helped us,» said journalist Sergei Parkhomenko, one of the leaders of the opposition protest movement.
«He is forcing things to breaking point. He is declaring war on us. As a result the base of aversion to him is growing.»
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