Off the wire
Roundup: Nigeria begins probe on sexual abuse of women in IDP camps  • UN envoy urges all Yemeni parties to engage in peace roadmap  • Lwandamina resigns as coach of Zambia's Champions League side  • 1st LD-Writethru: Xi stresses sound environment for public opinion  • China ratifies treaties with Tajikistan, Sri Lanka  • Kurdish forces free town from IS militants near Iraq's Mosul  • China, Netherlands to cement parliamentary exchanges  • Poll finds 43 pct Palestinians support neither Clinton over Trump  • Zambia farmers' body apologizes to donors over misappropriation of funds  • Commentary: Partisanship-plagued U.S. elections by no means "exemplary democracy"  
You are here:   Home

Russia denies involvement in U.S. presidential elections

Xinhua, November 7, 2016 Adjust font size:

Kremlin on Monday denied allegations that Russia has been involved in the U.S. presidential elections, saying that Moscow has neither right nor intention to interfere in the campaign.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the U.S. presidential campaign is "an internal affair of the Unite States and there are already lots of problems with it."

The United States has been accusing Russia of meddling in the U.S. presidential race between Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton and her Republican rival Donald Trump.

U.S. President Barack Obama said in July that it was "possible" that Russia would try to influence the U.S. presidential elections, after a leak of the U.S. Democratic National Committee emails, which some U.S. politicians have blamed on Russian hackers.

In October, the U.S. intelligence and security agencies issued a joint statement, blaming Russia for directing attacks on American political organizations, which was later dismissed by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Putin said those claims were just an effort to distract the attention of the U.S. electorate from real issues. Endi