Russia, US spar over protests on Tweeter

The pointed exchange between the foreign ministry and US ambassador Michael McFaul followed the arrest of more than 600 demonstrators in Moscow and Saint Petersburg on Monday after Putin’s triumph in presidential elections.
“Troubling to watch arrests of peaceful demonstrators at Pushkin Square,” McFaul tweeted shortly after helmeted riot police moved in to break up the rally

“Freedom of assembly and freedom of speech are universal values,” he said.
McFaul was the architect of US President Barack Obama’s “reset” in ties with the more reform-minded outgoing President Dmitry Medvedev.
But he vexed Moscow on his arrival in January by immediately meeting with top anti-Putin leaders.

The Russian foreign ministry’s response to Twitter user @McFaul was quick and biting.
“The police on Pushkin Square were many times more humane that what we witnessed with the dispersal of the Occupy Wall Street protests and the tent cities in Europe,” the foreign ministry said.

McFaul also received an angry reply from Arkady Dvorkovich – the economic adviser of Medvedev.
“And the detention of protesters in the US – is this normal?” Dvorkovich asked.
Putin’s return to the post he held in 2000/2008 was preceded by his angry accusation that the US State Department helped incite the protests in a bid to complicate his return.

The former KGB agent sparred with the United States through most of his first two terms as president and had been one of Russia’s strongest critics of the NATO-led campaign in Libya.

Meanwhile, Russians rallied in Moscow and other cities to challenge Putin’s victory in Russia’s presidential election, prompting hundreds of arrests.
Police said they had arrested 250 people in Moscow and 300 in Saint Petersburg on Monday after moving in roughly to break up demonstrations against what opposition activists say was a rigged vote.
The opposition supporters, who had been granted permission by authorities to protest for an hour, gathered in front of a stage emblazoned with the slogan “For fair elections”.

Putin, who has dominated Russian politics since the beginning of the 21st century, won more than 63 percent of Sunday’s vote, according to the nearly complete official returns, but the opposition has alleged widespread fraud and independent monitors said the vote was skewed in Putin’s favour.
Monitors from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) pointed at the lack of real competition in the race and said the vote count “was assessed negatively” in almost a third of polling stations observers visited.

Criticism of the vote has added fuel to protests by Putin’s critics who are questioning his victory and demanding an end to his dominance of the Kremlin.
Putin served two terms as president between 2000 and 2008, before stepping aside to become prime minister under Dmitry Medvedev because of Russia’s two consecutive-term limit.

Many Russians credit him with restoring the country’s prestige and influence on the international stage after the chaos and financial collapse of the country in the 1990s following the end of the Soviet Union.
But critics accuse Putin of authoritarian tendencies and say he has failed to root out pervasive corruption.

Police said that 15 000 people took part in a counter rally on Monday in support of Putin outside the Kremlin walls.
Putin’s nearest challenger in Sunday’s vote said he would not congratulate his rival as the winner of the elections.
“I think that we must not congratulate Putin’s team, him, or the country with this sort of election because everyone has lost, because the forced results and forced meetings cause nothing for the citizens of Russia except humiliation and distress,” said Gennady Zyuganov, the leader of Russia’s Communist party who came second in the vote with

just over 17 percent.
For all the allegations of voting irregularities, Putin’s election win has not gone unrecognised.
Catherine Ashton, the European Union foreign affairs chief, acknowledged the “clear victory” for Putin.

“The EU takes note of the preliminary results of the presidential elections and the clear victory of Vladimir Putin,” Ashton said in a statement which also called on Russia to address polling “shortcomings” identified by international observers.
The US State Department said it looked forward to working with Putin once election results are certified but urged the authorities to probe voting irregularities.

British Prime Minister David Cameron told Putin by phone that he would work with him to overcome differences between the two countries.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy congratulated Putin, while urging him to “continue democratic and economic modernisation.” – AFP/Al Jazeera.

Earlier French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe gave a cool reaction to Putin’s return to the Russian presidency, saying the election “was not exemplary” but accepting that his controversial victory was not in doubt. — Al Jazeera.

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