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Economist: A highly dubious result

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  • Economist: A highly dubious result

    A highly dubious result

    The Economist
    Nov 22 2004

    >>From The Economist Global Agenda


    A huge protest has gathered in Ukraine's capital amid signs that the
    expected winner of its presidential election, Viktor Yushchenko, was
    robbed of victory by ballot fraud. Will the authorities crush the
    protest or is a revolution—of the "velvet" or the blood-soaked
    variety—in prospect?

    ACCORDING to the exit polls, Ukraine's pro-western opposition leader,
    Viktor Yushchenko, was heading for clear victory in the final round
    of the country's presidential election, held on Sunday November 21st.
    They showed Mr Yushchenko on 54%, compared with 43% for Viktor
    Yanukovich, currently Ukraine's prime minister, whose bid for the
    presidency is backed by the outgoing president, Leonid Kuchma, and
    Russia's leader, Vladimir Putin. Yet as voting continued overnight,
    the opposition leader's apparent walkover somehow turned into a
    narrow win for the official candidate. On Monday, the Ukrainian
    electoral commission said that, with over 99% of votes counted, Mr
    Yanukovich had an unassailable lead of almost three points.



    Ukraine's election
    Nov 19th 2004
    Ukraine's presidential election
    Nov 4th 2004
    Ukraine, Belarus and Russia
    Oct 28th 2004
    Ukraine's presidential election
    Oct 28th 2004
    Ukraine's presidential vote
    Aug 12th 2004



    Russia, Ukraine



    The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe reports from
    its independent electoral observation mission in Ukraine. The EU
    issues statements on the elections and gives information on foreign
    relations. See also the US State Department. "Governments on the WWW"
    provides a comprehensive resource on the government and politics of
    Ukraine, including the previous election results.



    Elections and debt relief for Iraq Nov 22nd 2004
    The falling dollar Nov 22nd 2004
    Yukos under siege Nov 19th 2004
    Bush's cabinet reshuffle Nov 18th 2004
    The Buttonwood column Nov 16th 2004

    About Global Agenda






    Fearing a repeat of the widespread irregularities seen in the first
    round of voting last month, thousands of Mr Yushchenko's supporters,
    dressed in orange, his campaign colour, gathered in sub-zero
    temperatures in the main square of the capital, Kiev, on Sunday
    night. They called on the government to recognise his victory, and by
    Monday morning, as the country's electoral commission began issuing
    tallies showing Mr Yanukovich in the lead, their numbers had swollen
    to perhaps 50,000. "Remain where you are," the opposition leader told
    his followers, promising that tens of thousands more protesters were
    on their way, "on carts, cars, planes and trains", to demonstrate
    against the alleged defrauding of the election. Many protesters began
    to pitch tents along Kiev's main avenue. "Our action is only
    beginning," said Mr Yushchenko. By the evening, their numbers were
    said to have risen above 100,000.

    Western observers immediately denounced the election. Senator Richard
    Lugar, a Republican sent by President George Bush to monitor voting,
    accused the Ukrainian government of supporting a "concerted and
    forceful programme of election-day fraud and abuse". The European
    Union said all 25 member countries would be summoning their Ukrainian
    ambassadors to register a formal protest. But Mr Yanukovich's
    campaign manager, Serhiy Tyhypko, insisted that his man had won,
    arguing that the exit polls were not reliable. Mr Putin congratulated
    Mr Yanukovich on his victory.

    All through the campaign, Ukraine's news media have been highly
    skewed towards Mr Yanukovich, barely giving the opposition leader a
    mention. Ahead of the first round of voting, the official candidate's
    supporters were accused of intimidating electoral officials to try to
    swing the vote his way. Mr Yushchenko even accused them of being
    behind an attempt to poison him, which has left his face bloated and
    scarred. In Sunday's run-off, suspicions centred on possible
    fraudulent multiple voting in the Russian-speaking east of the
    country, where support for Mr Yanukovich is strongest. According to
    the official electoral figures, turnouts there were implausibly high,
    at up to 96%.

    Mr Yanukovich had some strong cards to play in the election campaign:
    he recently awarded big increases in pensions and public-sector pay;
    and the Ukrainian economy is booming, helped by a bumper grain
    harvest and rising exports of steel and chemicals. Nevertheless, even
    some in Mr Yanukovich's eastern power base have grown sick of his
    regime and the oligarchic business clans that prop it up.

    Foreign observers have been taking a close interest in Ukraine's
    election, not just because it is one of eastern Europe's largest
    countries, with 49m people, but because the outcome could have
    important consequences for the whole region. Mr Yushchenko presented
    himself as a pro-western, free-market reformer who will seek
    membership of the EU and the American-led NATO defence alliance,
    while cleaning up corruption and enforcing the rule of law. Mr
    Yanukovich, in contrast, stood for deepening Ukraine's close links
    with Russia. If Mr Yushchenko had gained the presidency and led
    Ukraine towards becoming a westernised democracy with European-style
    prosperity, voters in Russia and elsewhere in eastern Europe might
    have begun to demand the same.

    A win by Mr Yushchenko would have been a huge blow to Mr Putin, who
    twice visited Ukraine during the election campaign to back Mr
    Yanukovich (while denying this was the purpose of his trips). The
    Russian president's attempts to exert control over former Soviet
    states would be greatly diminished if the second-largest of them were
    to escape from his grip and join the West.

    So what now? Much depends on the determination of Mr Yushchenko's
    supporters. Already, there is talk of a general strike. The city
    councils of Kiev and another big city, Lviv, have refused to
    recognise the official result of the election. Will there now be a
    crescendo of protests and civil disobedience until they reach a point
    where Mr Yanukovich has no option but to step aside? After all,
    something rather similar happened last year in another former Soviet
    state, Georgia, where people power forced its then president, Edward
    Shevardnadze, to resign following dodgy parliamentary elections.

    Mr Shevardnadze was forced to quit after it became doubtful if
    Georgia's armed forces would obey any order to crush the protesters.
    The question is whether Ukraine's security forces would react in the
    same way: on Monday night, they issued a statement promising that any
    lawlessness would be put down "quickly and firmly".

    Though Mr Yushchenko is now hoping for a Georgian-style bloodless
    revolution, there are also some less promising precedents among the
    former Soviet states: only two months ago, Belarus's president,
    Alexander Lukashenka, "won" a rigged referendum to allow him to run
    for re-election. The EU is said to be planning to tighten its
    sanctions against his government but so far there is no sign that he
    will be dislodged from power. Azerbaijan and Armenia both held flawed
    elections last year: in Azerbaijan, there were riots after the son of
    the incumbent president won amid widespread intimidation and bribery,
    but these were violently put down; and in Armenia, voters reacted
    with quiet despair at the re-election of their president amid reports
    of ballot-stuffing. If Ukraine follows these precedents, hopes for
    change there will be dashed.

    --Boundary_(ID_F/8Wh8ME2zAhqGCbBEQDVg)--
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