Sputnik: Please, tell us about your experience as an observer at the Russian presidential elections. What is your impression about it?
Dimitri de Kochko: I have experience observing French electoral commissions, in Russia I have already monitored one election, it was for the parliament, and I was present there as a journalist for other elections. So I know a little about how the system works and what changes have [taken place] in the last years and since 2012. This time I was in Irkutsk and I must say it was quite interesting to see how the elections were going there. I would say everything was very quiet, there's a lot of technology involved, much more than we have in France, so that is very interesting.
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I was surprised by the fact that many young people have voted; I have been told in Irkutsk itself and in other parts of Russia, of course, but in Irkutsk at least, just a day before the election that young people won't vote because they are not interested in politics and they are not interested in anything except shopping and laughs, that's not true either.
Sputnik: What do election observers to actually; what's an observers routine? What is an observer supposed to do?
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