Polls are closed for the Crimean referendum. The
electoral commission is reporting that about 64% of eligible voters
turned out to vote, with 93% voting in favor of joining Russia. The
world meanwhile awaits the official Kremlin response on the matter and
more so Vladimir Putin’s decision on whether or not to readmit the
autonomous region as part of the Russian Federation.
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The crucial referendum on either becoming an integral part of Russia
or staying within Ukraine on conditions of wide autonomy has kicked off
in the Republic of Crimea despite international condemnation and
pressure from Kiev.
The polling stations of 27 regional Crimean election commissions are
going to be open all day long, from 8am until 8pm (0600 GMT- 1800 GMT).
Up to 1.5 million people – this is the number of ballots printed for the
referendum – are expected to cast their votes in favor of the republic
either joining Russia or remaining part of Ukraine.
An exceptionally high turnout has already been registered at the
referendum. More than 44 percent of Crimean residents (over 670,000
people) had taken part by noon, according to the head of the Crimean
parliament’s commission on the referendum, Mikhail Malyshev.
By 11 am, one-third of Kerch residents had cast their ballots, while
in Sevastopol 50 percent of the population had done so by noon, local
officials said.
“We are already witnessing quite a high turnout in areas inhabited by Crimean Tatars,” an international observer and MP from Poland, Mateus Piskorski, told Itar-Tass. “That’s a very important fact that representatives of the Tatar minority are participating in the referendum.”
Before the referendum, there were calls by some of the Crimean Tatars’ leaders to boycott the event.
“I haven’t witnessed a single violation during the referendum,” Ewald Stadler, an international observer and member of the European Parliament told Itar-Tass. “I haven’t seen anything even resembling pressure. People themselves want to have their say.”
Some 10,000 members of the Crimean military recently formed from
self-defense squads, and over 5,000 police officers are ensuring the
referendum goes smoothly.
Crimean authorities have reported about 135 registered international
observers have arrived from 23 countries, including Austria, Belgium,
Bulgaria, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Latvia and Poland. Members of
the EU and national European parliaments, international law experts and
human rights activists together with 1,240 local observers are
monitoring the voting at ballot stations. Mass media in the peninsula is
represented by 623 accredited journalists from 169 international media
outlets.
After a power grab took place in capital Kiev on February 22,
Ukraine’s legitimate President Viktor Yanukovich had to flee from his
residence fearing for his life. The parliament of the Crimea autonomy,
where about 60 percent of the residents are ethnic Russians, did not
acknowledge the coup-imposed government in Kiev as legitimate and took
the decision to dissociate from Ukraine.
On March 11 the parliament of the Crimea autonomy adopted a declaration of independence from Ukraine, opening way for the referendum on March 16.
The referendum in Crimea was preceded with numerous provocations on
the peninsula and threats coming from the capital Kiev and western
politicians.
Since the moment Crimea set date for independence referendum,
official Kiev has been claiming that all actions of the Crimea
authorities are illegitimate, disregarding the international practice of referendums.
On Saturday Ukraine’s parliament made the last desperate gesture to
prevent the referendum, voting to dismiss the Crimean Supreme Council.
Though self-defense guards have done their best to prevent provocations in the peninsula, they took place anyway.
On the eve of the vote, Crimean self-defense forces prevented an
attempt to damage a gas pipeline at the Arabat Spit. The people trying
to damage the pipeline introduced themselves as officers of the Border
Guard, the Crimean Prime Minister Sergey Aksyonov said.
In the Crimean capital of Simferopol an undisclosed number of people
under the guise of policemen were detained for purposefully damaging
civilians’ passports or taking away their documents to make it
impossible for the citizens to vote in the absence of ID.
The same fraud has been also reported in the small town of Saky in western Crimea.
Nationalists from western Ukraine and Kiev, such as members of
ultra-nationalist Right Sector group, made multiple attempts to sneak
into the autonomous region to stage protests against Crimean
independence.
Sometimes people shouting Nazi slogans joined peaceful demonstrations
in Crimea’s cities, calling upon people not to vote in the referendum.
Despite that, mass pro-Russian protests have been held for the past
weeks in the eastern regions of Ukraine and Crimea. The demonstrators
were protesting against the new government, storming local government
offices and replacing Ukrainian flags with the Russian tricolor. People
in Simferopol, Odessa, Kharkov, Donetsk, Lugansk, Melitopol, Yevpatoria,
Kerch and Mariupol – all took to the streets shouting slogans in
support of the Crimean referendum.
According to a GfK poll of 600 residents taken Thursday and Friday
ahead of the referendum, 70 percent said they will vote to become part
of Russia, while 11 percent said they will vote to restore Crimea’s
status as part of Ukraine.
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