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PRIVACY

Vladimir Putin secures another term as Kremlin leader after waging war and 'rigging' election

The three-day election that began on Friday has taken place in a tightly controlled environment where there are no real alternatives to Mr Putin, no public criticism of him or his war in Ukraine

Russian President Vladimir Putin during an interview earlier this month(POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Vladimir Putin has secured another term in office after a tumultuous election that has widely been disregarded as a sham, initial results reportedly show.

Early exit polls show the Kremlin leader has won 88 per cent of the vote, returning him to power for a fifth term, according to projections published by the Public Opinion Foundation (FOM). Its figures show that at least 73.33 per cent of Russians voted in the presidential elections. That eclipses the final voter turnout in 2018 by nearly 5 per cent. If the exit polls hold, Putin's victory margin will be his highest so far, besting his previous highest in four previous elections - 76.7% in 2018.

His nearest rival according to the polling organisation was communist candidate Nikolay Kharitonov, 75, who won around 4 per cent of the vote. The two other candidates Vladislav Davankov, 40, and Leonid Slutsky, 56, scored 4.2 per cent and three per cent, respectively. Despite their different political perspectives, all three main opponents broadly back the Kremlin's policies.

The final votes are currently being cast in the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad, which is an hour behind Moscow. Early reports suggest that in the occupied Donetsk region of Ukraine - where the election is illegal and are being held after the Russian military invaded in 2022- Putin won 95.23 per cent of the vote, early polls show. In neighbouring Luhansk region, he won 95 per cent.

The three-day election that began on Friday has taken place in a tightly controlled environment where there are no real alternatives to Mr Putin, no public criticism of him or his war in Ukraine.

Yulia Navalnaya attends a rally near the Russian embassy in Berlin on March 17, 2024(AFP via Getty Images)

His fiercest critic, Alexei Navalny, died in an Arctic prison last month, and other critics are either in jail or in exile. Mr Navalny's associates had urged those unhappy with Mr Putin or the war to protest by coming to the polls at noon on Sunday - a strategy endorsed by the opposition leader shortly before his death.

Yulia Navalnaya, his wife, claimed she wrote the name of her 'murdered' husband on her ballot while voting in the Russian presidential election in Berlin this afternoon. Team Navalny described the poll protest as a success, releasing pictures and videos of people crowding near polling stations in cities across Russia around noon.

Earlier today, Yulia Navalny was cheered as she joined an anti-Putin protest before casting her ballot. The demonstrations came as Ukraine began to fight back against its forces in a new wave of attacks using drones to attack its forces.