Estimated 200,000 protest Ukraine election (Agencies) Updated: 2004-11-23 20:15 About 200,000 demonstrators flooded the center of
the Ukrainian capital Tuesday to protest alleged fraud in the presidential
election, and the opposition leader claimed victory and accused authorities of
rigging the election.
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Thousands of demonstrators gather to protest alleged fraud in the
presidential elections on the main square of the Ukrainian capital Kiev,
Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2004. The opposition called an emergency parliament
session Tuesday to demand the annulment of official results already
rejected by several municipal governments.
[AP] | The Ukrainian Election Commission's announcement that Kremlin-backed
Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych was ahead of Western-leaning candidate Viktor
Yushchenko with nearly all the votes counted dismayed ¡ª and angered ¡ª many of
the former Soviet republic's 48 million people.
Yushchenko on Tuesday claimed victory and asked for international
recognition. He accused authorities of rigging Sunday's vote and announced a
campaign of civil disobedience.
"We appeal to the parliaments and nations of the world to bolster the
will of the Ukrainian people, to support their aspiration to return to
democracy," a statement from Yuschenko's campaign office said.
He called on his thousands of supporters camped at the central
Independence Square to walk to the parliament building ahead of an emergency
session called to consider annulling the official results and a no-confidence
vote in the election commission.
While such a parliamentary decision would carry huge political
significance, it would not be binding. According to the Ukrainian constitution,
a no-confidence vote must be initiated by the president in order for it to be
binding. Outgoing President Leonid Kuchma has staunchly backed Yanukovych.
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