Kremlin dismisses election criticism

Mon Dec 3, 2007 6:14pm GMT
 
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By Oleg Shchchedrov

MOSCOW (Reuters) - The Kremlin dismissed criticism on Monday of a parliamentary election in which President Vladimir Putin's party won a landslide victory, saying Russia shares democratic values with West.

Germany had earlier added to Western criticism of Sunday's poll, saying it was "neither a free nor democratic election".

"Certainly we would disagree with statements that Russia is undemocratic and its election was undemocratic," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told a conference call with foreign journalists.

"But an ideological split can appear only between two different systems. We are not different systems, we share the same values," he added. "I see no chance that this could widen a gap between us."

Putin, who made a series of anti-Western statements during the campaign, topped the United Russia party list, helping it to win a constitutional majority in the lower house of parliament, the Duma.

Putin warned during the campaign that he would not allow the West to poke "snotty noses" into Russia's affairs and accused Washington of encouraging the election arm of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) not to send observers to the polls.

Putin, who suspects the West of seeking to undermine Russia by backing revolts similar to those in ex-Soviet Ukraine and Georgia, said Russia would never follow that path.

"It's now clear to me that Russians will never allow their country to develop along the destructive path seen in some other countries of the former Soviet Union," he said.  Continued...

 

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