The spokeswoman was asked about the decrease in the number of polling stations abroad.
“But in terms of the number of [polling] stations, there are indeed significantly less this time. For one simple reason: these are precisely the actions of those very unfriendly regimes that are doing everything in order to prevent, disrupt, intimidate our citizens, and exert political pressure but they see no success,” Zakharova said.
The extent to which US media has become fixated on the Russian presidential election is bizarre given the distance between the two countries and the differences in their historical trajectories, the spokeswoman highlighted.
Zakharova pointed out the attention with which US television channels are following the election in Russia adding that the US media appeared unable to wean themselves from the old narratives that Moscow allegedly influences presidential elections in the US.
"They really treat our elections as if we are electing both our president and a person who will also be governing the US, just a little. That is how they present it, anyway," she said.
Virtually every US broadcaster has slotted time to cover the Russian presidential election daily for several month, according to the spokeswoman.
"I have not a single example of this happening to countries that are located on different continents and do not have common [land] borders or any obvious mutual influence of electoral cycles. There are countries that were previously united by a common state space or some historical space, and indeed, there may be some connections there. But nothing like that connects us with the US," Zakharova said.
The three-day voting in the Russian presidential election started on Friday morning. Over 700 international observers from 106 countries have been accredited to polling stations in the country, including the new territories. Voter turnout across Russia was 35.4% at 9 p.m. (18:00 GMT), the Central Election Commission said.