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War-scarred Ukraine counts down to key vote

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Ukraine wraps up campaigning Friday for a weekend vote that will dramatically reshape parliament after a year of upheavals in which a deadly pro-Russian uprising has threatened to splinter the ex-Soviet state.

Sunday's snap poll was called by President Petro Poroshenko in August under public pressure to purge parliament of lawmakers tied to the old regime of Viktor Yanukovych, ousted in February after a wave of bloody protests.

While Poroshenko may succeed in creating a pro-Western coalition in parliament, he is falling short of his other aim of bringing the separatist east under control and out of the reach of an increasingly assertive Kremlin.

Russian President Vladimir Putin -- accused of stirring up the uprising after seizing Crimea in the wake of his ally's ouster in Kiev -- said he respected Ukraine's territorial integrity but questioned how its frontier with Russia was set.

"The history of Ukraine's formation and its current borders -- this is a rather complex process," Putin said in the Black Sea resort of Sochi.

Ukraine had 36.5 million voters, but lost about 1.8 million after the loss of Crimea in March.

Almost three million others live in separatist-controlled areas of Lugansk and Donetsk regions, where insurgent leaders are boycotting the polls and holding their own votes a week later.

- 'Ballots not guns' -

A street photographer holds pigeons as she walks on Independence Square in Kiev on October 24  2014
A street photographer holds pigeons as she walks on Independence Square in Kiev on October 24, 2014
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

Kiev has nevertheless vowed to organise polling stations in government-controlled areas of the rebellious east, with Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk promising to ensure security on election day.

"It's difficult to hold elections in a country that has seen military aggression from Russia," Yatsenyuk said Thursday, warning that anyone seeking to disrupt the process will be punished.

"The choice should be made not with a gun but with a ballot."

Poroshenko said Thursday he hoped to be able to form a Westward-leaning coalition to enact all needed reforms and rebuild Ukraine's economy despite the insurgency in the country's coal and steel belt.

"We will form a new pro-European coalition without lies and populism, and Ukraine will be an honest and efficient state," the 49-year-old chocolate baron vowed.

Poroshenko said the coalition will start by modernising the economy -- notoriously corrupt and burdened by a cumbersome tax system -- to meet the demands of international lenders behind a $27 billion rescue deal aimed at averting bankruptcy.

His ponymous Petro Poroshenko Bloc is leading in opinion polls with up to 30 percent of the vote.

However he is not likely to command a majority in the 450-seat parliament and will need to ally with nationalist forces such as wild card radical Oleg Lyashko, whose party has been polling on 13 percent.

A man walks by pre-election poster of Arseniy Yatsenyuk  leader of People's Front party  qlued ...
A man walks by pre-election poster of Arseniy Yatsenyuk, leader of People's Front party, qlued on a street pillar in western Ukrainian city of Lviv on October 24, 2014
Yurko Dyachyshyn, AFP

Poroshenko said that despite the continuing violence, and the rebels' refusal to accept his offer of temporary self-rule, the war will not become a post-Soviet frozen conflict similar to Moldova's breakaway Transdniestr region or Georgia's Abkhazia whose independence is recognised by Moscow.

"There is not going to be a frozen conflict because Donbass cannot survive without Ukraine," Poroshenko said.

- Violence 'down' in east -

A Moscow-backed truce Kiev and the separatists signed on September 5 has calmed the worst fighting but continues to be broken on a daily basis around the largest rebel-held city Donetsk.

A defence official in Kiev accused the fighters of planning another major raid on the city's disputed airport this weekend.

More than 3,700 people have been killed in the conflict since April, according to UN figures, and at least 824,000 displaced.

And the threat of Ukraine's breakup still looms large, with the rebels who declared their own "people's republics" in Donetsk and Lugansk earlier this year planning to defiantly break away from Kiev's authority with elections of their own on November 2.

Kiev is also at pains to find a solution to its latest gas dispute with Russia as temperatures on Friday plummeted below zero in the capital.

With the failure of latest talks between Kiev and Moscow, which is demanding that Ukraine settles an unpaid gas bill of $5.3 billion, the country is under pressure to pay up while funds run dry.

The so-called anti-terrorist operation against the pro-Russian separatists was estimated by Poroshenko in the summer months to cost the budget about $5.4 million a day.

Ukraine wraps up campaigning Friday for a weekend vote that will dramatically reshape parliament after a year of upheavals in which a deadly pro-Russian uprising has threatened to splinter the ex-Soviet state.

Sunday’s snap poll was called by President Petro Poroshenko in August under public pressure to purge parliament of lawmakers tied to the old regime of Viktor Yanukovych, ousted in February after a wave of bloody protests.

While Poroshenko may succeed in creating a pro-Western coalition in parliament, he is falling short of his other aim of bringing the separatist east under control and out of the reach of an increasingly assertive Kremlin.

Russian President Vladimir Putin — accused of stirring up the uprising after seizing Crimea in the wake of his ally’s ouster in Kiev — said he respected Ukraine’s territorial integrity but questioned how its frontier with Russia was set.

“The history of Ukraine’s formation and its current borders — this is a rather complex process,” Putin said in the Black Sea resort of Sochi.

Ukraine had 36.5 million voters, but lost about 1.8 million after the loss of Crimea in March.

Almost three million others live in separatist-controlled areas of Lugansk and Donetsk regions, where insurgent leaders are boycotting the polls and holding their own votes a week later.

– ‘Ballots not guns’ –

A street photographer holds pigeons as she walks on Independence Square in Kiev on October 24  2014

A street photographer holds pigeons as she walks on Independence Square in Kiev on October 24, 2014
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

Kiev has nevertheless vowed to organise polling stations in government-controlled areas of the rebellious east, with Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk promising to ensure security on election day.

“It’s difficult to hold elections in a country that has seen military aggression from Russia,” Yatsenyuk said Thursday, warning that anyone seeking to disrupt the process will be punished.

“The choice should be made not with a gun but with a ballot.”

Poroshenko said Thursday he hoped to be able to form a Westward-leaning coalition to enact all needed reforms and rebuild Ukraine’s economy despite the insurgency in the country’s coal and steel belt.

“We will form a new pro-European coalition without lies and populism, and Ukraine will be an honest and efficient state,” the 49-year-old chocolate baron vowed.

Poroshenko said the coalition will start by modernising the economy — notoriously corrupt and burdened by a cumbersome tax system — to meet the demands of international lenders behind a $27 billion rescue deal aimed at averting bankruptcy.

His ponymous Petro Poroshenko Bloc is leading in opinion polls with up to 30 percent of the vote.

However he is not likely to command a majority in the 450-seat parliament and will need to ally with nationalist forces such as wild card radical Oleg Lyashko, whose party has been polling on 13 percent.

A man walks by pre-election poster of Arseniy Yatsenyuk  leader of People's Front party  qlued ...

A man walks by pre-election poster of Arseniy Yatsenyuk, leader of People's Front party, qlued on a street pillar in western Ukrainian city of Lviv on October 24, 2014
Yurko Dyachyshyn, AFP

Poroshenko said that despite the continuing violence, and the rebels’ refusal to accept his offer of temporary self-rule, the war will not become a post-Soviet frozen conflict similar to Moldova’s breakaway Transdniestr region or Georgia’s Abkhazia whose independence is recognised by Moscow.

“There is not going to be a frozen conflict because Donbass cannot survive without Ukraine,” Poroshenko said.

– Violence ‘down’ in east –

A Moscow-backed truce Kiev and the separatists signed on September 5 has calmed the worst fighting but continues to be broken on a daily basis around the largest rebel-held city Donetsk.

A defence official in Kiev accused the fighters of planning another major raid on the city’s disputed airport this weekend.

More than 3,700 people have been killed in the conflict since April, according to UN figures, and at least 824,000 displaced.

And the threat of Ukraine’s breakup still looms large, with the rebels who declared their own “people’s republics” in Donetsk and Lugansk earlier this year planning to defiantly break away from Kiev’s authority with elections of their own on November 2.

Kiev is also at pains to find a solution to its latest gas dispute with Russia as temperatures on Friday plummeted below zero in the capital.

With the failure of latest talks between Kiev and Moscow, which is demanding that Ukraine settles an unpaid gas bill of $5.3 billion, the country is under pressure to pay up while funds run dry.

The so-called anti-terrorist operation against the pro-Russian separatists was estimated by Poroshenko in the summer months to cost the budget about $5.4 million a day.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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