Nearly a thousand supporters of Ukrainian Prime Minister and
presidential candidate Viktor Yanukovych attend an assembly to support him in
central Donetsk, east Ukraine, on Dec. 24, 2004. (Xinhua Photo)
Christmas trees with glistening decorations are seen everywhere in downtown
Kiev, the capital of Ukraine. People dressed like Santa Claus and Snow Maidens
are cheerfully inviting pedestrians to take photos in the central Independence
Square. Everything reminds you of the jolly big occasion: It is the Christmas
Day.
Yet, there is something unusual this year. The tent village near the
square, set up since the Nov. 21 presidential election runoff by supporters of
opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko, and passersby wearing orange shawls --
symbol of the Yushchenko camp -- constantly remind you of an unfinished
race.
It is the eve of the decisive repeat vote of the presidential runoff.
Everyone hopes the new poll would finally close the page on the month-long
crisis sparked by the controversial November poll.
"All our Ukrainians are
hoping for a successful presidential election," said Rodislav Leifer, a police
officer on duty.
"We want the new president to put our country in order," he
said, refusing to disclose whom he would vote for.
Others are more outspoken
in their political allegiances. Alexander Maskolenko, a young cook, said he
would vote for Yushchenko instead of Prime Minister Viktor
Yanukovych.
Maskolenko has stayed in the tent village since Nov. 23 to
protest the previous vote results. Yanukovych was initially declared the winner
but was later stripped of his victory by the Supreme Court after Yushchenko
filed an appeal demanding invalidation of the vote, citing massive
frauds.
Maskolenko said he would go back to vote in his hometown in western
Ukraine and then return to Kiev to join a mass demonstration.
"Some 30,000
supporters of Yushchenko from other cities will gather here tomorrow,"
Maskolenko said.
Yushchenko has called on his supporters to come to the
Independence Square on Sunday to stay "until our victory is
celebrated."
Although Yushchenko declared victory in their fight for a
revote, the stage they set up in the Independence Square -- the main venue of
opposition rallies -- and some tents nearby have not been
dismantled.
Maskolenko hopes that Yushchenko will fulfill all his campaign
promises, not just half of them. "Otherwise, we will drive him out of office,"
he said.
Yanukovych's supporter are also easy to spot. A Kiev street vender,
who declined to give his name, said he would vote for Yanukovych.
Natalya, a
volunteer at Yanukovych's campaign headquarters in Donetsk, an eastern
industrial city, said she supports the prime minister because he would pay more
attention to the development of the east.
"I do not believe that Yushchenko
would do so," she said.
Yanukovych protested the Supreme Court's decision to
annul the November poll's results and called the opposition protests in central
Kiev "an unconstitutional coup." But he eventually decided to take part in the
rematch.
Ukraine was plunged into a turmoil after both candidates claimed
victory in the Nov. 21 runoff. The two camps staged protests and called large
rallies in major cities around the country, causing traffic jams and disrupting
business. Yushchenko' s supporters surrounded government buildings in what they
said the "orange revolution," virtually bringing the city to a
standstill.
West-leaning Yushchenko draws strong support in western
Ukrainian-speaking regions, a traditional stronghold of nationalism, while
pro-Moscow Yanukovych enjoys backing mainly in heavily industrialized eastern
and southern regions, where Russian is spoken. The disputed election drove a
wedge between the regions with opposing allegiances and strained relations
between Russia and Western countries.
In Kharkov, an eastern city bordering
Russia, 36-year-old Liudmila said no matter which candidate wins the poll, the
historical, religious and cultural ties between Ukraine and Russia cannot be
cut.