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Ukraine PM to challenge presidential election results

Mon, Feb 15 2010 11:57 CET 2746 Views 5 Comments
Ukraine PM to challenge presidential election results

Ukraine's prime minister and presidential candidate Yulia Tymoshenko speaks during her televised address in Kyiv, February 13 2010.

Ukrainian election officials say they will not consider Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko's complaints of presidential election fraud.  Opposition leader Victor Yanukovich defeated Ms. Tymoshenko by 3.5 percentage points in the February 7 runoff election.  Voters have mixed feelings about Ms. Tymoshenko's attempts to win the presidency.
 
The ruling by Ukraine's Central Election Commission to not investigate allegations of vote rigging is a setback for pro-Western Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko's campaign to challenge the results of the February 7 ballot.
 
Ms. Tymoshenko said in a televised appeal to the nation Saturday she is convinced her rival, Victor Yanukovich, who seeks closer ties with neighboring Russia, had not won the presidential election.
 
She stressed she would challenge the results in court.
 
Prime Minister Tymoshenko says "Ukraine's election was falsified."  It is not a political declaration, she adds, but the legal assessment of lawyers.  She says there were likely more than one-million fraudulent votes; the difference between losing and victory.      
 
The prime minister has pledged not to call for street protests similar to those of the 2004 Orange Revolution, which broke out after alleged election fraud.
 
 Ms. Tymoshenko says "Ukraine does not need more public strife" but "stability and peace."  That is why she says she will only defend the voter's choice in court.  The prime minister makes clear that whatever the outcome of that legal battle, Mr. Yanukovich is, in her view, "not the democratically elected president of Ukraine."
 
But even in Ms. Tymoshenko's political stronghold of Western Ukraine voters have mixed feelings about her attempts to become president.
 
In the border town of Uzzhorod residents watch electronic billboards, but few can buy the promoted  products, as the country faces its deepest recession in recent memory.  Voters also complain about rampant corruption among local authorities.
 
There is a lack of regular running water in several areas, while doctors at the local hospital admit they do not always provide blood to patients that is tested for the HIV virus that causes AIDS.
 
These social problems also existed before Ms. Tymoshenko and her allies launched the Orange Revolution, in which they pledged reforms and prosperity.  Now five years, later Nadija Prijma regrets that she and her husband returned from neighboring Slovakia, where she was a baby sitter and cleaned homes while her husband worked in the construction business.   
 
She says when the Orange Revolution began, they decided to return to Ukraine.  It is something they now deeply regret, because, she says, "the promises of the Orange Revolution were not kept."
 
The apparently victorious Mr. Yanukovich has pledged to tackle corruption and improve living standards, but not everyone is convinced, including student Andrej Suran, 23.

"I know that in his staff are a lot of very good specialists, bBut his politics and pro-Russian orientation, I do not like that," he said.  "I do not think that all things that he told to our people is really the truth.  So I think that he is not very good for our country." 

There is also international concern that a long post-election battle may worsen Ukraine's economic outlook and delay the release of more than $16 billion in emergency assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).  Analysts say the country needs to adopt the 2010 budget to resume cooperation with the IMF and pay for natural gas imports from Russia.

Source: Voice of America

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Comments

Anonymous Irina Thu, Feb 18 2010 17:58 CET

Come on people,enough of this Russia thing.Everybody seem to forget our history,history of our grand-grand parents who died for our country(endependence)...We can not take a chance to go back.As far a s Russian speaking and relatives...might sound cold but too bad...I live in US(country of immigrants) and guess what,everybody speaks English...You want to live in this country,respect it's traditions,customs and believes...Why when people visit Eastern part of Ukraine have to speak Russian language?It is my country,it's name is Ukraine and language is Ukrainian.One of my relatives live in Russia and whey speak Russian there,not Ukrainian.As far as Yanukovych...It is [...]

Read the full comment unheard of that somebody who was in prison would even be in Parliament.It is a joke.In US if you have a felony th you can't even be a police officer or own any licences,it is always in your record.On top of that,he is owned by oligarchs,he is just a poppet.Being in Donetsk he stole so many things...You want to say that all those money that he has was made by working hard?We all know where those money came from.

Anonymous jonathan mbnunes Tue, Feb 16 2010 07:04 CET

Yanukovich has shown to be a clever administrator and as a politician is a sort of groundfooted man; Tymoshenko, on the other hand, seems to play a double game where personal interest matters more than that of the country.

Anonymous Valeri Mon, Feb 15 2010 21:07 CET

This is no way to speak about Princess Leia!

Agreed - she's very much responsible for leaving us in the cold last winter.
Down with her!

Anonymous Vadim Mon, Feb 15 2010 16:39 CET

Many say they voted for Yanukovych as the less of two evils. I still am puzzled why Tihipko who has much less to be critisized for than both candidates did not make it to the runoff.

Anonymous Tanya R. Mon, Feb 15 2010 14:56 CET

I believe that Tymoshenko is an egocentric person who only wants power and does not care about the Ukrainian population. She is the one who has huge amounts on her offshore accounts thanks to her criminal activity right after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. She was wanted by Russians for the millions of cub meters of stolen gas and was directly involved in Lazarenko’s affaire (the guy is under arrest in the US now). The newspapers show her as a good public speaker and leader, but when you listen to her carefully you can see that she never answers [...]

Read the full comment the questions, always promises a lot, and basically lies all the time about what was or will be done. Her actions show that she is completely incompetent in how the country needs to be managed, and the deals she signed, for instance with Russia on gas, are not beneficial for Ukraine (we currently pay for gas more than the highest price paid by the EU (ie Germans) although we are one of the main consumers of Russian gas). Yanukovich was Donetsk region governor, and was very successful in his role. He is the one who really works hard and prefers doing to speaking. Regarding relations with Russia, it is unfair to say that he is pro-Russian – he just sees the reality of Ukraine, where the native language of many people is Russian, and where we have huge links (including, relatives, or commercial relations) with Russia. So, it is obvious for him, that to claim that we should cut all the relations with Russia and to move to the EU is simply nonsense which cannot be realized. He just tries to have good relations with its neighbours, as the EU does, for the MUTUAL benefit.


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