Apr 20, 2017

UNPO Condemns Russian Decision to Hold Next Presidential Election on Fourth Anniversary of Crimea Illegal Annexation


 

The Russian State Duma voted to approve a bill allowing the government to conduct the next presidential election on 18 March 2018 instead of the week before. The day was chosen as it will mark the fourth anniversary of Crimea’s illegal annexation by the Russian Federation. Observers assume that the choice of this new election day would trigger a massive turnout and increase Putin’s popularity. Shortly after this news was released, Ukraine openly condemned this decision. The Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO), in stressing once again its condemnation of the illegal annexation of Crimea and of the dire human rights situation in the peninsula that followed, deems reprehensible Russia's bid to influence its elections at the expense of the Tatars and other Crimeans. UNPO calls once again for the Russian occupation of Crimea to cease and for the human rights violations committed by occupation authorities against the local population and in particular the indigenous Tatars, to stop. UNPO has been following the situation in Crimea through a dedicated page on its Website.

Below is a press release published by RFE/RL:

 

Russia is preparing to move the date of the 2018 election that is expected to hand President Vladimir Putin a new term from March 11 to March 18 -- the day Russia celebrates its seizure of Crimea from Ukraine.

The State Duma approved a bill on the date change on April 12 in the first of three votes on the issue in the lower house of parliament. It is certain to pass.

Russian law says that presidential elections are held on the second Sunday in March unless that is a working day, in which case the voting must be held a week earlier.

The authors of the bill said that March 11 was likely to be a working day after the March 8 International Women's Day holiday. But instead of holding the election a week earlier, they proposed March 18.

Observers suspect the Kremlin hopes holding the vote on March 18 will boost turnout and attract more votes for Putin because that was the date, in 2014, on which he signed a treaty that Moscow claims made the Crimean Peninsula part of Russia.

Kyiv, the United States, and most other countries reject that assertion. They consider Crimea, which Russia seized after sending in troops and staging a referendum denounced as illegitimate by 100 states, to be part of Ukraine.

Putin, in power as president or prime minister since 1999, has not announced plans to run for a new six-year term but is widely expected to do so.