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Thursday 30 October 2014

Poroshenko’s Party Claims Victory in Ukraine Election

Poroshenko claims landslide victory for pro-western parties in Ukraine elections

Ukraine's President Petro Poroshenko talks to the media during a news briefing in Kiev.
Petro Poroshenko
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Sunday claimed a landlside victory for pro-western parties in the country's key parliamentary elections.
More than half of the votes went to pro-government parties, and "a constitutional majority" of more than 75 per cent of voters supported the country's course towards Europe, Poroshenko said in a statement.
"The Ukrainian government won a compelling vote of confidence from the people," he said, adding that he will speed up reforms in the crisis-hit country.
The party of Ukrainian President, Petro Poroshenko, claimed victory on Wednesday in parliamentary elections held at the weekend.
Volodymyr Groysman, a leader of the Poroshenko Bloc, said in Kiev, that his party was the leader as it had shown supremacy at the elections.
“We are the leaders with the support of the absolute majority of Ukrainians,” he said.
Groysman, who was also a deputy prime minister, said that Poroshenko’s party was leading both in party lists and in first-past-the-post voting.
He said the summary distance to the second-placed People’s Front party was one million votes.
The election commission data published on Wednesday indicated that the Poroshenko Bloc would get 133 seats, while the People’s Front could expect just 81.
Meanwhile, leaders of the pro-Russian separatists said that they were preparing for war.
Alexander Zakharchenko, the leader of the self-declared “Donetsk People’s Republic” accused the Ukrainian government of having backed away from a ceasefire agreement.
“Ukraine declared that it has withdrawn its signature, we are preparing for war,” he said.
Security Council Spokesman Andriy Lysenko denied having ever signed such an agreement.
“You cannot renounce something that never existed,” he said.
Lysenko also warned voters not to participate in the elections in the separatist-held districts of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions.
“This can be life threatening, explaining that means possible provocations and terrorist attacks in polling stations,” he said.
Kiev and the West argue that the election on Sunday was illegitimate.
extracts from reuters, the news

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