You're reading: Hundreds rally in protest over ‘stolen’ Ukraine election

Hundreds of people rallied in central Kiev on Monday to protest against what the Ukrainian opposition says was vote-rigging by President Viktor Yanukovich's ruling party in the Oct. 28 parliamentary election.

 Crowds gathered outside the Central Electoral Commission
headquarters in the Ukrainian capital in response to a call for
protest by opposition parties, including that of jailed ex-prime
minister Yulia Tymoshenko.

Police told the crowd by loud-speaker that the protest was
illegal and might be broken up by force if people did not
disperse, a threat ignored by the demonstrators.

“The Party of the Regions is simply stealing the votes of
Ukrainians and registering them as the votes of the candidates
of the party in power,” said Arseny Yatsenyuk, who heads the
united opposition in the absence of Tymoshenko.

“We have gathered here to defend our choice, the choice of
Ukraine and Ukrainians. Ukraine has shown that it is capable of
beating the Party of the Regions,” he told the crowd.

Tensions have focused on the outcome of a handful of
constituencies where the vote-count for seats in the 450-seat
parliament has not been completed.

Anger erupted at several of nine disputed districts with
election officials conducting the vote-count besieged by
opposition supporters and members of Yanukovich’s Party of the
Regions, demanding a re-count or threatening court action. Riot
police used tear gas to quell trouble in one district.

The opposition hinted it might go as far as boycotting the
new parliament if it did not get satisfaction.

“Unless the government immediately stops rigging the vote
and illegally taking away mandates won by opposition candidates
… United Opposition is ready to denounce the next parliament
as powerless and insist on early parliamentary and presidential
elections,” it said in a statement.

From the vast majority of results already in, the Regions,
seen as representing the interests of big business, appear to
have retained a majority of more than 225 seats in the assembly,
assuming support from their traditional communist allies and
some independents.

But the Batkivshchyna (Fatherland) of Tymoshenko, which
forms the core of the united opposition, has made a strong
showing.

The opposition has been further re-energised by the UDAR
(Punch) party of world heavyweight boxing champion Vitaly
Klitschko and the far-right nationalist Svoboda (Freedom) party
which have won representation in parliament for the first time.

“We are protesting. We want to defend our votes. The Party
of the Regions has falsified the elections, taken our victory.
It is us who ought to have the majority not them,” said
50-year-old Nadezhda Storozhuk, a Batkivshchyna supporter.

“We have turned out to defend the interests of simple people
who have voted and whose votes have been stolen. We are ready
for other kinds of action if need be,” said Yuri Derkach, 45, a
supporter of Svoboda.