Ukraine "Election": see here the final result BEFORE it will be published

LastProphet

Senior Member
Apr 26, 2014
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Ukraine "Election": see here the final result BEFORE it will be published
Poroshenko wins at 52% (number can be slightly different, in any case above 50%).
Impostor impersonating Putin congratulates "winner", thus making the situation a perfect parallel to Syria:
- government recognized by Russia bombs own citizens, starting with children and women, as "elections" are staged.

Detail difference: in Ukraine
- the bombed are not arabs but ethnic russians.
- the government officially announces that will do all it can to take over one of the republics of the Russian Federation, more precisely Crimea.

BASICS
Impostor impersonating murdered Putin
Vladimir Putin and family murdered and replaced by impostors: Murdered Putin's impersonator openly tells who he is: a traitor - 6 examples..
 
Chocolate king gonna try to sweeten relations with Russia...

Analysis: Ukraine’s Likely President Leans Toward West but Must Face Moscow
May 26, 2014 — Billionaire Petro Poroshenko, Ukraine’s likely new president, wasted little time in exhibiting his pro-Western leanings. “We need to do all our best to bring in European values,” he said in a victory speech at a rally in Kyiv, after exit polls gave him a clear majority in the first round of voting Sunday.
Standing by his side as he spoke was the formidable bulk of former heavyweight boxing champion Vitaly Klitschko, the probable new mayor-elect of Kyiv and one of the leaders of the pro-European street protests that ousted Moscow-backed President Viktor Yanukovych in February. Klitschko’s withdrawal from the presidential race and his endorsement of Poroshenko were key elements in the oligarch’s first-round victory. But in the immediate days and weeks, the most important challenge facing Ukraine’s fifth president since the country broke with the Soviet Union 23 years ago isn’t the country’s developing ties with Europe, analysts say.

The priority will be to repair Kyiv’s shattered relations with Moscow, they say, and to find a solution to the separatist insurgency that Kyiv accuses the Kremlin of fomenting. Separatists - as if to emphasize they have no intention of throwing in the towel as exit polls indicated there would be no need for a run-off election next month - forced the shutdown of Donetsk airport Sunday night. The evening standoff came after they threatened poll workers, closed polling stations and intimidated voters. On Sunday night, Poroshenko described relations with Russia as “the hardest in the last 200 years.” But the oligarch, nicknamed the “chocolate king” for his confectionary business empire, added a note of optimism, saying, “I'm sure that we can talk to Russia with the help of the U.S.”

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Ukrainian presidential candidate Petro Poroshenko, left, talks with Vitali Klitschko, at right, during a press conference, in Kyiv, Ukraine,

Business community seeking calm

It may be domestic allies among Ukraine’s oligarchs who can help him more than Washington. They have already started the process, say aides to Poroshenko. A key interlocutor behind the scenes is Ukraine’s richest businessman, Donetsk native Rinat Akhmetov. The coal and steel magnate last week threw his weight behind the pro-unity cause – belatedly, some critics says – and urged his workers in east Ukraine to help boost law and order in the region and to stage protests against separatists. “Akhmetov has good contacts in the Kremlin and he is using them now,” a European diplomat told VOA.

The diplomat said Ukrainian businessmen are partly responsible for Russian President Vladimir Putin’s softened rhetoric last week. The Russian leader on Friday said he would respect the election’s outcome, a shift from his earlier position that Yanukovych’s ouster was a coup and the election therefore illegal.

Kremlin expectations
 
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