KIEV: Jailed opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko made an impassioned call to Ukrainians yesterday to throw out President Viktor Yanukovich’s ruling party on Sunday and stop a “dictatorship” which she warned would isolate Ukraine.
Tymoshenko’s plea added to tension ahead of a parliamentary election in which Yanukovich’s Party of the Regions is seeking to hold on to its majority against a divided opposition, weakened by her imprisonment.
No opinion polls have been published in the former Soviet republic since October 18 in line with an official information black-out.
But ratings before then showed the Regions with a firm lead over opposition parties which include Tymoshenko’s Batkivshchyna (Fatherland) and a new liberal party headed by heavyweight boxing champion Vitaly Klitschko.
The government is unpopular because of its tax and pension policies. But most commentators expect the Regions, which is bankrolled by Ukraine’s wealthiest industrialists, to hold on to its majority in the 450-seat assembly, cementing the leadership of Yanukovich who comes up for re-election as president in 2015.
Tymoshenko, a former prime minister and the country’s most vibrant opposition leader, is serving a seven-year jail sentence for abuse of office which the United States and the European Union have denounced as “selective justice” and see as political vengeance by Yanukovich. In a statement read out by her daughter Yevgenia, the 51-year-old Tymoshenko, a political firebrand in her heyday, described Sunday’s election as a “war which can end with your victory and a chance for change or with our total historical failure.”
“If, thanks to your votes, Yanukovich survives as a politician in these elections, he will establish a dictatorship and will never again give up power by peaceful means,” she said.
Indicating that a year in prison had not dimmed her powers of oratory, she said Yanukovich’s rule would be like a blaze tearing through every family and every company, engulfing freedom and “isolating Ukraine from the rest of the world”. The EU shelved landmark agreements on free trade and political association with Ukraine after Tymoshenko was sentenced a year ago. On indifferent terms with Russia too, many commentators see Ukraine as being adrift in a grey no-man’s land between Moscow, Brussels and Washington.
Of the 450 seats in the single-chamber parliament, 225 will be filled through voting by party lists, in which the voter casts a ballot for a party which presents a list of candidates. The other half will be filled by voting for individual candidates in electoral districts - a feature re-introduced by the present parliament and one which is assumed to favour the Regions.
Reuters