AFP-JIJI
MARIUPOL, UKRAINE – Ukraine’s local elections were canceled on Sunday in the strategic
southeastern port of Mariupol because of what officials described as a lack of
sufficient ballots in the disputed industrial city.
“Polling stations did not open in Mariupol because the
ballots were not ready in the voting offices,” said electoral commission
Natalia Kashchiy.
An AFP journalist in central Mariupol confirmed that
the doors of voting stations remained shut in city of nearly 500,000 people — a
focal point of pro-Russian rebel attacks for much of the 18-month conflict
tearing the ex-Soviet nation apart.
A statement from Ukrainian President Petro
Poroshenko’s Solidarity party said the polls “were aborted for formal reasons —
due to the improper preparation of election ballots, the absence of control
over their printing and number, and reliable storage.”
Mariupol provides a vital land bridge between
separatist regions in the southeast and Crimea — the Ukrainian peninsula seized
by Russia a month after the February 2014 ouster of Moscow-backed but
corruption-tainted president Viktor Yanukovych.
Poroshenko’s party said it still hoped to conduct
mayoral and regional council elections in the city in the coming weeks.
The Solidarity party and its ruling coalition partners
“will initiate changes to the legislation that will allow elections to be held
on Nov. 15 — the date of the (potential) second round of mayoral election, or
at some other short-term date.”
Poroshenko’s fragile ruling coalition faces a major
survival test Sunday in tense local elections that exclude the pro-Russian
separatist east.
The polls come during a lull in fighting and with
worries growing that Ukraine is slipping off the global radar despite just
turning into Europe’s second-poorest country and still standing as a bulwark
against Russia’s feared expansion west.
But politicians in Ukraine were most concerned about
what happens in Mariupol — a vital outlet for the east’s industrial output that
had rebels stationed on its northeastern outskirts of throughout most of the
war.
The city came under a Jan. 24 mortar and rocket attack
that monitors blamed on the insurgents in which 31 lost their lives and more
than 100 were injured.
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