Dubai Telegraph - 'Anybody but Putin': Russians in Serbia vote without hope

EUR -
AED 3.888527
AFN 71.707535
ALL 98.090984
AMD 409.057758
ANG 1.898867
AOA 966.052703
ARS 1057.109536
AUD 1.626566
AWG 1.902983
AZN 1.795822
BAM 1.954642
BBD 2.12733
BDT 125.905439
BGN 1.955441
BHD 0.39899
BIF 3111.586725
BMD 1.058683
BND 1.416475
BOB 7.280688
BRL 6.085207
BSD 1.053566
BTN 88.904851
BWP 14.374352
BYN 3.447558
BYR 20750.18784
BZD 2.123732
CAD 1.484321
CDF 3038.420645
CHF 0.935556
CLF 0.037326
CLP 1029.939448
CNY 7.662216
CNH 7.660355
COP 4655.029384
CRC 536.582239
CUC 1.058683
CUP 28.055101
CVE 110.19974
CZK 25.276167
DJF 187.618007
DKK 7.459624
DOP 63.482406
DZD 141.227415
EGP 52.293861
ERN 15.880246
ETB 130.425263
FJD 2.401781
FKP 0.835637
GBP 0.835502
GEL 2.884902
GGP 0.835637
GHS 16.805048
GIP 0.835637
GMD 75.166726
GNF 9079.623091
GTQ 8.140179
GYD 220.429463
HKD 8.239063
HNL 26.614239
HRK 7.55186
HTG 138.408035
HUF 406.481436
IDR 16749.424582
ILS 3.951137
IMP 0.835637
INR 89.359572
IQD 1380.269573
IRR 44562.61259
ISK 144.500016
JEP 0.835637
JMD 167.222551
JOD 0.750708
JPY 163.504598
KES 137.046958
KGS 91.59805
KHR 4257.478742
KMF 492.022909
KPW 952.814346
KRW 1473.200077
KWD 0.325513
KYD 0.877972
KZT 525.708678
LAK 23147.292286
LBP 94351.125722
LKR 306.968215
LRD 193.335508
LSL 19.0816
LTL 3.126016
LVL 0.640387
LYD 5.145928
MAD 10.549153
MDL 19.144663
MGA 4925.036897
MKD 61.542153
MMK 3438.56126
MNT 3597.404957
MOP 8.447997
MRU 42.008123
MUR 48.995922
MVR 16.367172
MWK 1827.018049
MXN 21.411071
MYR 4.73127
MZN 67.676322
NAD 19.0816
NGN 1765.660328
NIO 38.777036
NOK 11.653558
NPR 142.247762
NZD 1.797455
OMR 0.407607
PAB 1.053576
PEN 4.004828
PGK 4.23849
PHP 62.13518
PKR 292.691105
PLN 4.319524
PYG 8212.098051
QAR 3.842524
RON 4.976335
RSD 117.001599
RUB 105.605105
RWF 1447.356554
SAR 3.974311
SBD 8.860668
SCR 14.544691
SDG 636.799886
SEK 11.55777
SGD 1.417439
SHP 0.835637
SLE 23.979201
SLL 22200.059295
SOS 602.149098
SRD 37.48267
STD 21912.601725
SVC 9.219453
SYP 2659.972781
SZL 19.074524
THB 36.609491
TJS 11.210461
TMT 3.705391
TND 3.330128
TOP 2.479543
TRY 36.637813
TTD 7.152764
TWD 34.335226
TZS 2809.725747
UAH 43.635047
UGX 3868.708969
USD 1.058683
UYU 45.183243
UZS 13499.005954
VES 48.41561
VND 26898.48967
VUV 125.688979
WST 2.95541
XAF 655.565681
XAG 0.033722
XAU 0.000404
XCD 2.861144
XDR 0.801518
XOF 655.562587
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.511909
ZAR 19.009322
ZMK 9529.417073
ZMW 29.053657
ZWL 340.895511
  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    24.39

    -0.21%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    13.2

    -0.23%

  • CMSC

    0.0540

    24.624

    +0.22%

  • RBGPF

    59.7500

    59.75

    +100%

  • BCE

    0.4100

    27.23

    +1.51%

  • RIO

    1.1400

    62.12

    +1.84%

  • AZN

    0.1600

    63.39

    +0.25%

  • BCC

    1.4500

    141.54

    +1.02%

  • GSK

    0.3400

    33.69

    +1.01%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    62.9

    +0.24%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    6.93

    +1.15%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    8.92

    +1.68%

  • RELX

    0.5900

    45.04

    +1.31%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    13.23

    +0.98%

  • BTI

    0.2900

    36.68

    +0.79%

  • BP

    0.4400

    29.42

    +1.5%

'Anybody but Putin': Russians in Serbia vote without hope
'Anybody but Putin': Russians in Serbia vote without hope / Photo: Andrej ISAKOVIC - AFP

'Anybody but Putin': Russians in Serbia vote without hope

Konstantin fled Russia to avoid being drafted into the army to fight in Ukraine. But he still wants to have his voice heard in Russia's elections later this month -- even though he has no one to vote for.

Text size:

Like many of the thousands of Russian exiles now living in Serbia, he remains deeply engaged with his homeland even if there is little hope that the political situation there will change anytime soon.

Broke and living in a threadbare apartment in Belgrade, life abroad has had its challenges.

But exile has given the 26-year-old political breathing space unimaginable back home.

"In Russia you will be arrested for anything," he said.

"It's not a question, it's a strong fact," he told AFP.

- 'Authoritarian elections' -

With anti-war candidate Boris Nadezhdin disqualified, Konstantin said he planned to cast a blank ballot in protest.

"These elections are not democratic elections. They are authoritarian elections," he said.

Millions of Russians living abroad are eligible to vote in the poll, largely viewed as a rubber stamp for Russian President Vladimir Putin to tighten his grip on power.

Voting is being held in countries where Moscow has diplomatic missions -- including states it considers "unfriendly".

Around 280 polling stations will be open in some 140 territories, according to the Central Election Commission's website.

Most will be open during the same three-day period as back in Russia -- from March 15 to 17 -- while some embassies will provide the opportunity for early voting, according to the TASS news agency.

"It's my civil obligation," said Viktor, a 35-year-old Russian living in Novi Sad, north of Belgrade. "I will vote for anybody but Putin."

- 'Stay on the street' -

Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, tens of thousands of Russians have settled in Serbia, where the community has largely flourished.

Some have opened restaurants or started tech companies and other businesses, making a noticeable and buzzy impact on the Serbian capital.

Serbia has also offered room for political activists still angling to remain relevant in Russia.

In recent weeks Russian expats have organised protests against the war in Ukraine, held memorial ceremonies following the death of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, and petitioned for Nadezhdin's candidacy.

"Here we have an opportunity to stay on the street and say the things we say to you today," Ksenia Kuznetsova, a 33-year-old Russian, told AFP on the sidelines of an anti-war protest.

"All of my friends, all of my family [that] stayed in Russia, have no voice. And I feel an obligation to do it instead of them," she added.

While she planned to vote, Kuznetsova is worried about having to go into the Russian embassy to cast her ballot.

Some also worry that Moscow is ramping up pressure on the Russian diaspora across the world.

For Elena Koposova and her family of four, that fear is all too real. They faced imminent deportation from Serbia after their residency permit was rejected without explanation.

The rejection follows years of living lawfully in Serbia after leaving Russia nearly a decade ago.

Koposova's family had invested in a business, sent their children to Serbian schools, learned the language and largely stayed out of politics.

"We are very law-abiding people, very quiet in our life," she told AFP. "I've never been politically active in Serbia, nor in Russia..."

With one exception, Koposova admitted. She signed an anti-war petition.

- Making an example of them -

This might have been enough to catch the attention of Russian intelligence agencies, she suspects, who pressured their Serbian allies to act.

"They really don't want people outside Russia [to] say anything against war ever, and this act against our family is quite random," she added.

They feel an example has been made of them to scare others.

"Other people hear about it and they will be afraid to say anything at all," she said.

The family appealed the decision and on Friday it appeared they may get a reprieve from Serbian authorities.

But the story has rattled the Russian community in Serbia, and came after a Russian exile known for organising cultural events had his residence permit annulled, forcing him to leave.

Elsewhere, singer and comedian Maxim Galkin said he was denied entry into Indonesia for a concert in Bali in January, while the anti-war Russian rock band Bi-2 was briefly detained by Thai authorities, sparking fears they would be deported to Russia.

Yet the crackdowns -- along with Navalny's death in a Russian prison last month -- has only reinforced the exiles' belief that they were right to flee Russia.

Whether the vote is fair or not, exiles are adamant that it is one of the few avenues left to have a say.

"I plan to participate but that does not mean that I trust the Russian election system," said Alex Maddalena, 44.

"I'm sure that it's completely untrustworthy."

U.Siddiqui--DT