November 01, 2004
Ukraine: Main Candidates Appear Set For Runoff After Presidential Election
by Askold Krushelnycky
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Amid allegations of vote fraud, Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich and his Western-leaning challenger Viktor Yushchenko appear headed for a runoff in three weeks. In balloting that could determine whether Ukraine turns toward Russia or the West, pro-Moscow Yanukovich holds a fractional advantage but neither candidate looks able to gain the 50 percent needed for an outright first-round victory.
Kyiv, 1 November 2004 (RFE/RL) -- The atmosphere was tense in Ukraine the day after landmark presidential elections.
The government claimed its candidate, Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, won the first round. But opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko accused the government of cheating and claimed victory himself.
With 91 percent of districts counted, the Central Election Commission credited Yanukovich with 40.46 percent of the vote to almost 39 percent for Yushchenko.
But Yushchenko accused the government of distorting the results and said that the opposition's "parallel" calculations on the basis of exit polls from around a third of constituencies had given him an outright victory with 54 percent of the vote compared to 27 percent for Yanukovich.
"Firstly, dear friends, something that Ukrainian democracy has strived to achieve for such a long time has come to pass -- the triumph of Ukraine's democratic forces," Yushchenko said.