The original Harry Potter

The fictional boy wizard, created by the British author JK Rowling, is hugely popular in Russia.

Russian NTV television reported that the 32-year-old man, who has stood unsuccessfully in past elections, has parliamentary and even presidential ambitions if he gets elected in the Ural mountain Sverdlovsk region.

But he will not be able to call himself plain Harry Potter, as election rules state that Russian citizens who change their name have to retain their patronymic - their genuine father's first name.

People are going mad, they are doing things unthinkable for a sane person

Archbishop Vikenty of Yekaterinburg

Harry Potter has his detractors in Russia despite the popularity of the books

Some Church groups have tried to ban them, arguing that they encourage Satanism and the occult.

Archbishop Vikenty of Yekaterinburg said of the attempt to use the character's name for political ends: "People are going mad, they are doing things unthinkable for a sane person."