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Anspannung steigt vor ukrainischen Wahlen

Veröffentlicht 12. Januar 2010 - Aktualisiert 29. Januar 2010
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Die ukrainische Ministerpräsidentin Julija Tymoschenko erhöhte die Anspannung vor den Präsidentschaftswahlen am 17. Januar und warnte ihren Hauptgegner, sie werde das Wahlergebnis gerichtlich anfechten, falls die Abstimmung manipuliert werde.

Tymoshenko also sought to spring a trap for former Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich by inviting him to take part in a live television debate ahead of Sunday's poll. 

But the Yanukovich camp, mindful of his often stumbling public performance, declined. 

Tymoshenko, who led tens of thousands in mass protests in 2004 against electoral fraud, focused her attack on Yanukovich and his wealthy backers whom she described as an "oligarchic plague of locusts". 

Yanukovich, who will likely face Tymoshenko in a run-off second round poll on 7 February, was the main loser in the 2004 'Orange Revolution' that brought President Viktor Yushchenko to power. After weeks of protests, a court ruled that a second round of voting had been rigged and ordered an unprecedented third round. 

"If fraudulence is revealed, if we are unable to defend an honest result and prove that there was falsification, then we will resort to the courts," Tymoshenko told 5th TV channel on Sunday night. 

"We will protect the country from a second coming of this oligarchic plague of locusts because they can eat up everything, but we must defend the country," she said. 

Yanukovich, who represents the business interests of several big industrialists in the east of the country, has the backing of metals-to-banking billionaire Rinat Akhmetov and others in his second bid for the post of president. 

Yanukovich had Moscow's backing for his bid for the presidency in 2004 and was tagged a pro-Moscow stooge after the Kremlin rushed to congratulate him prematurely on his election victory. 

This time around, Moscow has gone out of its way to say it is not getting involved in Ukraine's election. The signs are that Moscow would prefer to do business with Tymoshenko, though Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has denied Moscow is taking sides. 

Issuing the challenge for an "open and honest debate" on television before the poll, Tymoshenko, herself a slick public performer, said: "Since he says he would be a strong president, I want him to show that at least he is not a coward and agree to a debate." 

But Yanukovich, who often stumbles in his delivery and is prone to glaring errors of fact, side-stepped the trap. 

Yanukovich was ready to compete with Tymoshenko "by good deeds and not beautiful words," Anna Herman, his close ally in the Party of the Regions, told Interfax-Ukraine news agency. 

"If there was a world championship for beautiful unfulfilled promises then Yulia Tymoshenko would be without a challenger," Herman said. 

(EurActiv with Reuters.)

Nächste Schritte: 
  • 17 Jan. 2010: First round of presidential elections.
  • 7 Feb.: Second round.
Hintergrund : 

Ukraine held three elections in three years from 2004 to 2007 and was on the brink of another poll in 2008 before the president rescinded an order dissolving parliament. 

Viktor Yushchenko won office in 2004 after weeks of mass 'orange' protests against poll fraud, ushering in policies aimed at bringing Ukraine out of the shadow of giant neighbour Russia. 

Pro-Russian opposition leader Viktor Yanukovich was then initially declared the winner, but the result was overturned and Yushchenko won a re-run of the vote. 

Much of the infighting within the 'orange' camp has focused on antagonism between Yushchenko and his estranged ally from the revolution, Yulia Tymoshenko. 

Yushchenko first appointed Timoshenko as prime minister in 2005. He fired her several months later, saying economic growth had slowed under her rule. Yushchenko tried to make a deal with Yanukovych in August 2006 but then dissolved parliament, accusing the pro-Russian politician of trying to oust him. 

Tymoshenko returned as prime minister in December 2007, after her bloc and Yushchenko's party won a combined 228 seats in the 450-seat parliament. 

Tymoshenko has repeatedly called on the president to quit. EU leaders have many times expressed bitterness over the ill-timed political in-fighting between the two former 'Orange Revolution' allies (EurActiv 04/09/08). 

According to the local press, 18 candidates have submitted registration documents for the elections. However, most of them are expected to obtain a very modest percentage of the vote. 

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