Güncelleme Tarihi:
"He is the obvious leader," Churov said. Medvedev was trailed by Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov with 17.76 percent, followed by populist nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky with 9.37 percent and relative unknown Andrei Bogdanov with 1.29 percent, Churov said. Turnout among the country’s 108.95 million voters was 69.61 percent, he added.                   Â
Russians looked Monday to Dmitry Medvedev, the man they overwhelmingly chose as their next president, to continue Vladimir Putin’s policies of asserting this resurgent country’s power abroad and keeping a tight grip on society at home. The campaign was dominated by Medvedev, the Kremlins favorite, who refused to debate his rivals or formally campaign but received the bulk of the television coverage. In the end, no one was surprised by the result.
Not everyone accepted the results, and two of Medvedev’s challengers threatened to go to court over alleged violations. The few independent international observers who monitored the vote were to release their assessment Monday. The liberal opposition alliance headed by former chess champion Garry Kasparov planned marches in cities around the country Monday. Riot police have used violence to break up similar marches in the past, and trucks of police were stationed early Monday near the square where the The main outstanding question was who would be calling Medvedev ran against three rivals apparently permitted on the ballot because of their loyalty to the Kremlin line. But Communist Party candidate Gennady Zyuganov and ultranationalist candidate Vladimir Zhirinovsky still alleged violations after the voting ended. Zyuganov, Medvedev’s nearest challenger with almost 18 percent in the nearly complete results, said he would dispute the result. Zhirinovsky, with 9 percent, threatened to do so as well. As a key implementer of Putin’s polices, Medvedev is seen as unlikely to alter Putin’s assertive stance with the West, reduce state control over But Medvedev’s election was not a wide-open contest. Liberal opposition leaders Kasparov and Mikhail Kasyanov were barred from running on technicalities, and voters across The election won by Dmitry Medvedev, Vladimir Putin's chosen successor, was "not fair," the head of the sole Western observer mission said Monday. "It’s not fair," Andreas Gross, from the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) said while answering journalists questions at a briefing in