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Tomorrow 4th Mar 2012 will be Putin Day, President Putin

obama.bin.laden

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Obama will be under even a greater pressure from tomorrow onwards.

http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/webcams-ready-for-electoral-debut/453983.html

Webcams Ready for Electoral Debut
02 March 2012
By Nikolaus von Twickel

When the country elects a new president on Sunday, the world will be watching. But for the first time round, the world will be able to watch it live on the Internet as millions cast their vote from Vladivostok to Kaliningrad.

The ambitious plan to install two web cameras in each of the 100,000 ballot stations spread across the largest country in the world has been carried out successfully, Communications Minister Igor Shchyogolev said Thursday.

“We have more than 90,000 transmission points for 200,000 cameras — never has anything like this been done in the whole world,” he said.

The project, which comes with a $478 million price tag, was announced by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in December as a response to the massive protests against suspected vote-rigging in the State Duma elections.

Shchyogolev says the money is well-invested because the “unique infrastructure” would be expanded for uses like networking between schools — many of which serve as ballot stations — and introducing transmissions of court hearings.

“This is not a system meant for one day,” he said.

But the bold plan has failed to impress critics, who point to serious limitations in the project’s implementation.

They argue that the flood of footage won’t come from the places where most of the alleged violations took place during the Dec. 4 Duma vote — but at the district and regional elections commissions where the ballots are taken after voting.

Yet an upbeat Shchyogolev promised Thursday that the web cameras will provide stable transmission for up to 25 million users on election day.

He said the system’s capacity allows for 1.2 million viewers simultaneously and 60,000 simultaneous views per single camera — more than double of what is necessary.

“We expect up to 500,000 users,” he said.

The main drawback, critics say, is that Internet users cannot just log on and watch Sunday, but they need to register by Saturday at Webvybory2012.ru.

The site lets you browse a map of the country and zoom into any of the 91,400 ballot stations that have been equipped with cameras. Users must register (they may use existing social network profiles) and bookmark the stations they want to watch. On Sunday, they can only watch those stations they previously bookmarked.

“This means that authorities get a clear picture of the ballot stations that have no online audience — where they can do as they like just as before,” said Oleg Kozlovsky, an activist with the Solidarity opposition movement.

Shchyogolev explained that the registration system was introduced in order to avoid Internet traffic overload. He pointed out that Netflix, the U.S. video-streaming portal, had introduced restrictions for users wishing to stream more than one movie at a time for similar reasons.

“This is a purely technical, not a political limitation,” he said. He added that some 380,000 users had registered by Thursday.

Another limitation, introduced for legal reasons, stipulates that the transmission is interrupted when the vote count begins. As voting ends at 8 p.m. in each of the country’s nine time zones, the webcams go offline and will come back only after voting ends in the westernmost region Kaliningrad at 9 p.m. Moscow time.

This is to prevent voters getting influenced by footage from counting, and officials stress that the cameras continue recording. But Kozlovsky argued that this is another reduction in transparency because the archived recordings will be difficult to get.

Shchyogolev reiterated Thursday that every citizen will be able to order any archived recording by completing an application form at Gosuslugi.ru, a portal for electronic government services.

But that form was not searchable Thursday, and activists say the site has proven extremely cumbersome in the past. Nikolai Belyayev, a leading member of the League of Voters, a pressure group set up in the wake of the Duma elections, said his attempts to register for various services resulted in up to three-week delays because of glitches and bureaucratic holdups.

“The system to get archival material will be unbelievably complicated,” he predicted.

Activists also pointed out that the registration system and other limitations had not been widely reported by national media until now.

“And today it is only three days before the election,” Belyayev said.

Lilia Shibanova, the head of the independent elections watchdog, Golos, argued that the webcams would help check dubious voter turnout figures and that archive access was crucial because most professional observers will be working in polling stations Sunday.

“The biggest test will be to watch footage from the North Caucasus,” she said by telephone.

Regions like Chechnya and Ingushetia are notorious for reporting turnouts of more than 98 percent and results of 99 percent for Putin and his United Russia party.

Kozlovsky, the Solidarity activist, added that even the best camera footage won’t uncover the two most popular fraud methods used at December’s elections.

So-called voter carousels, where people vote at multiple polling stations, won’t likely be revealed because viewers would have to screen hundreds of voters’ faces, he said. And meddling with results further up in the election commissions’ hierarchy is hard to detect, “because there are no cameras and access is extremely restricted also for journalists,” he said.

However, even critics agree that the web cameras are, in principle, not a bad idea.

“Actually, this a viable solution for monitoring and protecting from vote fraud — if only it was not set up by exactly the same people who orchestrated the last falsifications,” said Anton Nosik, a popular blogger and opposition activist.
 
this will be followed by Putting day on 5 Mar 2012.

Clinton will be putting his little dick into tony and later tony will be putting his even smaller dick back into clinton.
 

Sunday, February 26, 2012


Anti-Putin protesters form human chain in Moscow

By Megan Davies and Thomas Grove

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Thousands of Russians joined hands to form a human chain around Moscow city centre on Sunday in protest against Vladimir Putin's likely return as president in an election next week.

2012-02-26T185407Z_3_BTRE81P0ZL100_RTROPTP_2_RUSSIA.JPG


Opposition supporters take part in a protest rally called The White Ring, while they build a human chain along the Garden Ring road in Moscow, February 26, 2012. REUTERS/Grigory Dukor

The protesters stood side by side around the wide 16-km (10-mile) Moscow Garden Ring Road in gently falling snow, many of them wearing the white ribbons that symbolise the biggest opposition protests since Putin rose to power 12 years ago.

The mood was festive as protesters, some chanting "Russia without Putin," waved at cars which hooted back in support. Some held blown-up condoms - mocking Putin for saying he mistook the white ribbons they pin to their coats for contraceptives.

"There is no way that Putin can win honestly," said Yevgeniya Chirikova, a leading opposition campaigner. "You see how many people are out here now. If we can prove that there is falsification in the presidential election, then there will be a very strong reaction (from the people)," she said.

Putin is all but certain to win the presidential election on March 4, and return to the post he held from 2000 until 2008, after a campaign portraying him as a strong leader who oversaw an economic boom and rebuilt Russia as a powerful nation. But the protests point to growing dissatisfaction among relatively well-off voters in big cities with a political system dominated by one man, widespread corruption and a lack of transparency.

Putin has remained Russia's dominant leader despite stepping aside to become prime minister in 2008 because of constitutional limits, and protesters are alarmed that could win two more terms and rule the world's biggest country until 2024. "I don't know that there will be any result (from the protest) but I've come to show the government that there are many of us and that there are many people together," said Nikolai Chekalin, a 66-year-old scientist.

"I would like transparency, an honest court and conditions for business to develop. Putin has been lucky, the price of oil has helped him. Without that he's nothing," he said, referring to the surge in global oil prices that fuelled Russia's economic boom during Putin's previous presidency.

DEMANDS FOR CHANGE

The organisers said they needed 34,000 people to complete the circle around Moscow's historic centre, which includes the Kremlin, the main centre of power in Russia. They put the number of protesters at 40,000. Police said 11,0000 had taken part. The opposition protests began after allegations of fraud in a parliamentary election won by Putin's party on December 4. The Kremlin has offered token electoral reforms but not met any of the protesters' main demands, including a rerun of the election.

The protesters acknowledge that Putin, who has a tight grip on the media, is sure to reclaim the presidency but they want to show their discontent in the hope that it might undermine him or
encourage him to make policy changes. "I think it is time for Putin to go. Even if he did good for the country in his first term, he can't remain in power forever," said Andrei Shirokolov, 46 , a physics researcher.

Shamsi Asafov, an 18-year-old student, said: "Today's demonstration has an important psychological effect. It shows the authorities that we will not give up ... It's a signal that the protest flame has not died down." About 3,500 also demonstrated in Putin's home town, St Petersburg, on Saturday to demand his resignation. Scattered protests have taken place in cities across the country and tens of thousands have attended each of three big Moscow rallies.

Putin's campaign team has organised rallies of its own to try to counter the opposition protests and portrays the opposition protest movement as a threat to stability. Tens of thousands packed a sports stadium to hear an address by Putin last Thursday, but many were state employees and some said they had been paid to attend or coerced by their bosses.

An opinion poll last week indicated Putin, 59, would easily win the election in the first round, avoiding a runoff, but the pollsters said the ex-KGB spy would face a lot of resentment. "If the foundation of a house is weak, the walls won't stand. The foundation of our country was the December 4 election. The presidency is nothing without a strong Duma (parliament)," said a 63-year-old pensioner who gave his name only as Yevgeny.

"These protests will continue even until revolution. The authorities aren't going to back down and we won't back down. So anything could happen."

(Additional reporting by Alissa de Carbonnel, Writing by Timothy Heritage, editing by Guy Faulconbridge)
Copyright © 2012 Reuters
 

Plot to assassinate Putin foiled: Russian TV


MOSCOW | Mon Feb 27, 2012 2:06am EST

2012-02-27T070430Z_1_BTRE81Q0JNM00_RTROPTP_2_RUSSIA-PROTEST.JPG


Opposition supporters take part in a protest rally called The White Ring by forming a human chain along the Garden Ring road in Moscow, February 26, 2012. REUTERS/Tatyana Makeyeva

(Reuters) - Russian and Ukrainian security groups have foiled a plan to assassinate Prime Minister Vladimir Putin after Russia's March 4 presidential election, Russia's pro-government Channel One television said on Monday.

The report, which did not quote any named security officials, said Ukrainian special services had detained two people in the Ukrainian Black Sea port of Odessa after an explosion at a rented apartment in which one person was killed.

The report said the plotters had been working for a group that wants to create an Islamic state in Russia's North Caucasus and had planned to travel to Moscow to assassinate Putin, who is expected to win the presidential election.

Channel One said the Ukrainian special services had alerted the Russian FSB security agency and the men had been detained early this year.

"Our final goal was to go to Moscow and attempt to assassinate Putin," a man described as one of the plotters was shown as saying on Channel One. "Our deadline was after the election of the president of Russia."

Russia's Interfax news agency said Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov had declined to comment on the incident. He could not immediately be reached for comment.

(Reporting by Gleb Bryanski, Editing by Timothy Heritage)
 

Sunday, February 26, 2012


Anti-Putin protesters form human chain in Moscow
.....

Plot to assassinate Putin foiled: Russian TV

These will continue to exist. But they are minority.

Obama & western idiots can only influence a tiny fraction of Putin's oppositions. The majority of the (minority) oppositions are actually rejecting the west & Obama because they are the CCCP communist actual & original! :D These people want to fuck the west & Obama even worse than Putin. :)
 
this will be followed by Putting day on 5 Mar 2012.

Clinton will be putting his little dick into tony and later tony will be putting his even smaller dick back into clinton.

Putin should play highhanded elimination against those playing with the western powers and label them as Russian Traitors. They want to put up a ring around the town Putin should shoot machine gun ammo belt the same length and location as their ring. :D Whatever happened in Syrian town Homs can be duplicated everywhere.
 
Last edited:
http://www.newsday.com/news/world/putin-poised-to-regain-kremlin-protests-likely-1.3575885


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Putin poised to regain Kremlin; protests likely

Published: March 3, 2012 5:10 PM
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
People walk in Red Square, with St. Basil's
image.JPG

Photo credit: AP | People walk in Red Square, with St. Basil's Cathedral in the background and the Lenin Mausoleum, at right, in Moscow, Russia. (Mar. 3, 2012)

MOSCOW - Vladimir Putin appears all but certain to return to the Kremlin in Sunday's Russian presidential election, but he'll find himself in charge of a country far more willing to challenge him.

An unprecedented wave of massive protests showed a substantial portion of the population was fed up with the political entrenchment engineered by Putin since he first became president in 2000, and police are already preparing for the possibility of postelection unrest in Moscow.

The Putin system of so-called "managed democracy" put liberal opposition forces under consistent pressure, allowing them only rare permission to hold small rallies and bringing squads of police to harshly break up any unauthorized gathering.

The Kremlin gained control of all major television channels and their news reports turned into uncritical recitations of Putin's programs, often augmented with admiring footage of him riding horseback, scuba-diving or petting wild animals.

But the protests, sparked by allegations of widespread fraud in December's parliamentary elections, forced notable changes.

Authorities gave permission, however grudgingly, for opposition rallies that attracted vast crowds, upward of 50,000 in Moscow. State television gave them substantial and mostly neutral coverage.

Whether that tolerance will last after the election is unclear. According to the most recent survey by the independent Levada Center polling agency, Putin is on track to win the election with around two-thirds of the vote against four challengers — enough to bolster his irritable denunciations of the protesters as a small, coddled minority.

Putin has repeatedly alleged that the protesters are stooges of the United States and Western European countries that want to undermine Russia and he has insulted them, saying for instance that their white ribbon emblems looked like condoms.

In the past week, the rhetoric became even harsher as Putin publicly suggested the opposition was willing to kill one of its own figures in order to stoke outrage against him. That claim came on the heels of state television reports that a plot by Chechen rebels to kill Putin right after the election had been foiled. Some of Putin's election rivals dismissed the report as a campaign trick to boost support for him.

Protests after the election appear certain.

"People in Russia are not going to recognize Putin's victory in the first round," Alexei Navalny, one of the loosely knit opposition's most charismatic figures, declared flatly this week.

Another prominent protest figure, Ilya Ponomarev, a parliament member from the opposition A Just Russia party, said the protesters' mood has become more truculent as authorities consistently brushed off their initial demands for nullifying the results of the December parliament election.

"It has evolved from 'we demand a rerun' to 'go to hell'," he said.

The Interior Ministry is calling in 6,000 police reinforcements to the capital from other regions, the state news agency ITAR-Tass reported Friday.

Whether Sunday's vote is seen as honest is likely to be key; a count without reports of wide violations could deprive protesters of a galvanizing issue.

As the first protests roiled the country, Putin announced an expensive program to place two web cameras in each of the country's 90,000 polling stations, one showing a general view and one focusing on the ballot box. However, their effectiveness is in doubt.

"Cameras cannot capture all the details of the voting process, in particular during counting," the election observation mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe noted in a report on election preparations.

Along with the OSCE mission, tens of thousands of Russians have volunteered to be election observers, receiving training for activist groups on how to recognize vote-rigging and record and report violations.

In the December election, observers from the non-governmental group Golos reported being threatened and kicked out of polling stations. Hostility to the group among officials remains; in January, the head of the Federal Security Service in the Komi republic called the group "extremists" inspired from abroad.

"The Russian government has done the right thing by allowing unprecedented public protests and proposing some reforms," Hugh Williamson of the international watchdog Human Rights Watch said in a statement. But "despite the positive developments, the climate for civil society is as hostile as it ever was."

In his past four years as prime minister — a sojourn he took because of a constitutional limit of two consecutive presidential terms — the steely Putin remained Russia's dominant political figure, overshadowing mild-mannered successor Dmitry Medvedev, who spoke often of reforms but accomplished little.

Putin has promised to appoint Medvedev prime minister if he wins the presidency in order to pursue his reform ideas, but many regard Medvedev as lacking the hard-edge political skills to be an effective reformer.

In addition, appointing him premier could anger the opposition by echoing an earlier humiliation — the day in September when Putin and Medvedev told an obedient convention of the ruling United Russia party that Medvedev would step aside from seeking a second term in order to allow Putin to run.

The decision, done without public input and presented as a fait-accompli, was widely seen as cynical and antidemocratic — even an analyst close to the Kremlin called it a "filthy deal" — and contributed strongly to the growing disillusion with Putin.

Despite that dismay, none of the other candidates have been able to marshal a serious challenge to Putin. The Communist Party candidate, Gennady Zyuganov, gets support of about 15 percent, according to the Levada center survey, which claimed accuracy within 3.4 percentage points. The others — nationalist firebrand Vladimir Zhirinovsky, Sergei Mironov of A Just Russia and billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov — were in single digits.
 
That kind of treatment to his own citizens would be sad. Russia has already got a very dark and unhappy history of slaughter viz the civil war and WW2.

The secret police the Cheka which eventually became the KGB was also used by despots like Stalin to torture and murder its own citizens.

Russia is supposed to be a First World country now. It cant do a Syria on its own citizens and hope to get away with it.

Putin should play highhanded elimination against those playing with the western powers and label them as Russian Traitors. They want to put up a ring around the town Putin should shoot machine gun ammo belt the same length and location as their ring. :D Whatever happened in Syrian town Homs can be duplicated everywhere.
 
That kind of treatment to his own citizens would be sad. Russia has already got a very dark and unhappy history of slaughter viz the civil war and WW2.

The secret police the Cheka which eventually became the KGB was also used by despots like Stalin to torture and murder its own citizens.

Russia is supposed to be a First World country now. It cant do a Syria on its own citizens and hope to get away with it.

Too bad El CIAda failed to assassinate him.:(
 
That kind of treatment to his own citizens would be sad. Russia has already got a very dark and unhappy history of slaughter viz the civil war and WW2.

The secret police the Cheka which eventually became the KGB was also used by despots like Stalin to torture and murder its own citizens.

Russia is supposed to be a First World country now. It cant do a Syria on its own citizens and hope to get away with it.

How did Singapore dealt with Traitors who collaborated with Japs? Citizen or whatever they consider themselves? They are worse than Japs citizens during WW2! We have too shoot them. However LKY made one of the the Istana Prataman! Similarly Russians should deal with their traitors who are pro-US. This is regardless weather they are Russian citizens. As long as the are pro-US traitors round them up and carry out the business. Millions of Japanese Americans and German Americans were rounded up detain and badly treated by USA during WW2 in concentration camps:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_American_internment

<iframe width="640" height="480" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/PgmbOh9zJLY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe width="640" height="480" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/Aqmx2XhHxeY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

You have to deal with business like business instead of dreaming to be kind. Your own fate & your enemy won't be so kind to you, and you have not much chance to make it yourself, how to afford to be so kind to enemies and traitors? LKY said - HARD TRUTH but he had no idea what is real HARD TRUTH yet. ;)
 
russia is a mafia state and putin is the mafia don. only in name it is call a democracy. singapore is between a true democracy and russia.
 
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