U.S. Urges Ukraine Not to Certify Votes
NewsMax Wires
Wednesday, Nov. 24, 2004
CRAWFORD, Texas - The Bush administration urged the Ukrainian
government on Tuesday not to certify results of the disputed presidential
election, which gave a Kremlin-backed candidate a narrow lead over a
Western-leaning opposition candidate with almost all votes counted.
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"The United States is deeply concerned by extensive and credible
indications of fraud committed in the Ukrainian presidential election,"
White House spokeswoman Claire Buchan told reporters at a briefing in
Crawford, Texas, where President Bush is spending Thanksgiving.
The Oct. 31 election shows Viktor Yanukovych - backed by the outgoing
government and Russia - beating Viktor Yushchenko, who is supported by the
United States. The election has been widely dismissed by observers as
flawed. The election is considered an important test of democracy in the
former Soviet republic of 48 million.
"We strongly support efforts to review the conduct of the election and
urge Ukrainian authorities not to certify results until investigations of
organized fraud are resolved," Buchan said.
The United States also expressed hope that the situation can be resolved
peacefully.
"The government bears a special responsibly not to use or incite violence
and to allow free media to report accurately on the situation without
intimidation or coercion," she said.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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