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    RPT-Putin's foes search for leaders in online Russia vote

    * Nearly 160,000 people registered for online poll

    * But many Russians are unaware, apathetic

    * Kremlin shrugs poll off, but organisers face pressure

    MOSCOW/YEKATERINBURG, Russia, Oct 18 (Reuters) - Opponents

    of President Vladimir Putin say elections in Russia are rigged

    in favour of his ruling party and are instead holding their own

    Internet contest to choose a "shadow parliament" they hope will

    reinvigorate the flagging opposition movement.

    Putin has dismissed those who took part in the biggest

    protests against his 12-year rule this year and last as

    "chattering monkeys", but has said the movement may produce

    civic leaders.

    But while the Internet election has generated a buzz of

    excitement among Muscovites plugged into Russia's

    opposition-oriented blogosphere and independent media outlets,

    few Russians outside big cities know the vote is even happening.

    The 211 candidates standing include student activists,

    entrepreneurs, a former investment banker, bloggers, a socialite

    restaurateur, an author and politicians of every stripe.

    Veteran opposition leaders such as former World Chess

    Champion Garry Kasparov and former Deputy Prime Minister Boris

    Nemtsov will compete with a host of lesser known contenders.

    Nearly 160,000 people have registered for the weekend vote

    that will elect a 45-member Coordinating Council in what some

    backers call "primaries" for a "shadow parliament". Organisers

    hope the election will help counter accusations that the

    opposition protest movement is leaderless and adrift.

    Ilya Segalovich, a co-founder of Russia's popular home-grown

    Internet search engine Yandex, helped design a

    web-based platform for the vote - becoming the highest profile

    Russian businessman to openly side with the opposition.

    Slick web clips have publicised the virtual contest and

    popular opposition-oriented cable-and-internet TV channel Dozhd

    has aired hours of vibrant debates among the candidates.

    In a video that launched the online campaign in August,

    protest leader and anti-graft blogger Alexei Navalny touted it

    as the solution to the "problem of the opposition's legitimacy."

    "This is how we will respond to the annoying but somewhat

    justified criticism of all these Kremlin sidekicks who say that

    they are ready to hold negotiations (with the opposition) but do

    not know who to talk to," Navalny said.

    On Facebook, many have swapped their profile pictures for

    one of them holding open their passport - one way to register

    for the vote, which is open all Russians 18 and up. Another way

    is to wire a symbolic sum, as little as one rouble ($0.03), to

    organisers who rely on banks to verify voters' identities.

    But it is unclear what role will be played by the council

    and critics have dismissed the vote as a popularity contest.

    CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION

    In a nation of more than 140 million, the relatively small

    number of voters risks playing into the hands of Putin

    supporters who have dismissed his critics as "Internet hamsters"

    and wealthy urbanites out of touch with the majority.

    The Kremlin says it will ignore the opposition vote, but

    cyber attacks on the vote's website, legal pressure on

    organisers and mud-slinging documentaries on pro-Kremlin

    television suggest the authorities are not indifferent.

    Federal investigators on Wednesday opened a criminal

    investigation into potential fraud by vote organisers. Critics

    say Putin has clamped down on dissent since starting a six-year

    term in May, with new laws increasing fines for disorder and

    protest leaders facing possible prison terms.

    "If the opposition has even the smallest chance of electing

    a leader, they'll just jail him," said Valery Sheperyov, a

    33-year-old lawyer in Moscow, who has not participated in street

    protests. "This vote will make the authorities' job easier."

    The online poll comes a week after local and regional

    elections in which the opposition failed to make inroads.

    Winning candidates will have to fight the impression that

    the spirit of the street protests - which were fuelled by

    allegations of vote fraud - has retreated to the Internet.

    "We have little interest in this," a Kremlin source told

    Reuters, dismissing participants as politicians "incapable" of

    taking part in real elections.

    "OPPOSITION IPO"

    The opposition vote is the brainchild of Leonid Volkov, a

    programming expert turned city councillor whose 2011 book "Cloud

    Democracy" is about how to use the Internet to shake up a

    political landscape dominated by state television.

    Huddled in the backroom of a hip office in the Ural

    Mountains city of Yekaterinburg, his team of programmers says it

    has worked non-stop to sift through an avalanche of queries from

    would-be voters and combat denial of service attacks (DDOS).

    Yet despite his activist's fervour, Volkov believes only

    Russia's business and political elite can change power. He

    described the online poll as an "initial public offering" to

    lure rich and powerful Russians to invest in the protest

    movement as an alternative to Putin's rule.

    "Business knows well what to expect from Putin's continued

    dominance: a doped-up oil price, an unbalanced budget, a failing

    pension system, a stagnating manufacturing sector, but it is a

    known evil," Volkov told Reuters.

    "If we show them that the 'revolutionary scenario' is better

    than Putin's ... we provoke a split in the elite, and the

    situation will end very quickly in a palace coup."

    But Galina Soldatova, a 60-year-old who works as a courier

    in Moscow to supplement her pension, had not heard of the vote.

    "I don't think anyone is interested or cares about this

    vote," she said. "People have their own problems to sort out."