Sat, May 26 2012

Tymoshenko to reject Ukraine presidential election result -- report

Tue, Feb 09 2010 10:34 CET 3517 Views 3 Comments
Tymoshenko to reject Ukraine presidential election result -- report

Yulia Tymoshenko.

Against a background of apparent hints that she should accept her defeat in Ukraine’s presidential elections, word was awaited from Yulia Tymoshenko on February 9 2010 as to whether she would concede – or contest the result in court.

Local media quoted her as telling officials of her party on February 8 that she rejected the result and it would take it to court, but the report had not been confirmed by Tymoshenko by the morning of February 9.
 
Results of the second round of voting on February 7 gave a narrow margin of victory to Viktor Yanukovych, the pro-Moscow leader who has called on Tymoshenko to concede and to resign as Ukraine’s prime minister.
 
In a statement on the elections, of which the first round was held on January 17, European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said that she welcomed the completion of voting and the "positive assessment" given to the process by the OSCE/ODIHR-led International Election Observation Mission.
 
"The generally calm atmosphere in which the elections were conducted, the open campaign in the media and the fact that the electorate were provided with a genuine choice represent important achievements in Ukraine’s democratic development," Ashton said.
 
"I should in particular like to congratulate the people of Ukraine for the high turn out in both rounds of the elections and the strong commitment demonstrated to the democratic process," she said.
 
Ashton said that the EU "remains committed to deepening the relationship with Ukraine and supporting it in implementing its reform agenda. It looks forward to working with the new president to this end".
 
Tymoshenko was expected to hold a news conference some time on February 9, after twice postponing addressing the media the previous day, the BBC said.
 
Joao Soares of the OSCE election observers team told journalists on February 8: "It is now time for the country’s political leaders to listen to the people’s verdict".
 
Tymoshenko earlier indicated that she would not accept the result, with her camp alleging election irregularities. Before the second round, Tymoshenko said that she might unleash a second Orange Revolution, a reference to the events of six years ago that saw popular protests bring about a change of power in Kyiv.
 
In turn, Yanukovych’s camp has said that they would "defend his victory".
 
With the EU and the OSCE signalling acceptance of the election process, however, Tymoshenko may lack allies in contesting the result. By the morning of February 9, official reaction from Washington and Moscow was awaited.
 

  • Print
  • Send via email
  • Translate to
  • Share:

Comments

AnonymousValeriThu, Feb 11 2010 01:14 CET

This comment has been removed by the moderator because it contained off-topic content

Anonymous :) Tue, Feb 09 2010 21:02 CET

:)

Anonymous valeri Tue, Feb 09 2010 21:02 CET

This woman could do miracles...


To post comments, please, Login or Register.


Please read the The Sofia Echo forum comments policy.

Ukraine PM to challenge presidential election results

Ukraine's Central Election Commission says it will not investigate allegations of vote rigging from the February 7 ballot

White House, Kremlin, EU hail Yanukovych’s Ukraine presidential election victory

US president Barack Obama and Russian president Dmitry Medvedev have both called Viktor Yanukovych to congratulate him, and European Council President Herman van Rompuy joins in, snuffing Yulia Tymoshenko’s hopes of significant international support for her objections to the poll result.

Yanukovych maintains lead in Ukraine election, but Tymoshenko refusing to concede

With almost 90 per cent of votes counted, Yanukovych has a lead of about 2.76 per cent, according to the central election commission in Kyiv, but Tymoshenko is to contest some votes and may take the entire presidential election to court.

Yanukovych beats Tymoshenko in Ukraine elections – exit polls

Tymoshenko camp refuses to concede, alleging possible irregularities, reports from Kyiv say.

Tensions high on the eve of Ukraine's February 7 presidential elections

Prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko and pro-Russian opposition leader Viktor Yanukovych ended a bitterly-fought campaign on February 5 2010 with rival rallies.

EU foreign policy chief Ashton ‘closely following’ Ukraine election developments

In the second round of Ukraine’s presidential election on February 7 2010, Viktor Yanukovych and prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko will face off in a contest that is being keenly contested – and has been hit by a row about ballot counting rules.

More in this category

Putin takes Russian presidency for historic third term

World leaders acknowledged Putin's victory with reservations, and international observers say the election was skewed in the former president's favour.

France elects first socialist president in nearly two decades

Hollande's call for more spending and economic growth has struck a chord with French voters.

Serge Sarkisian’s ruling party wins Armenian parliamentary elections – exit polls

Gallup International Association poll gives president Sarkisian’s party 44 per cent, while three main challengers alleged ‘machinations’ by ruling party in what – in contrast to 2008 – reportedly was a largely peaceful election.

Report: Only 14.5 per cent of people have access to free press

The Freedom House report says the media environment in the Middle East and North Africa underwent major improvements in 2011, but remained the worst-performing part of the world.

Don’t like the job, time to move on

Dissatisfaction with jobs is a global phenomenon and two-thirds of workers all over the world intend to look for another job in the near future, the survey concluded.