KIEV: Ukrainian economist Yevgeniya Gorobey will vote for a pro-Moscow candidate in next week’s presidential poll even though Russia annexed Crimea and fuelled a separatist uprising in the ex-Soviet country’s east.
“What is the most important thing right now? To stop the war,” Gorobey, who lives in the capital Kiev, told AFP. “I will vote for Yuriy Boyko.”
The 35-year-old mother of one said she believed the former ally of ousted Kremlin-backed president Viktor Yanukovych — unlike the current elites — would look for ways to end a conflict that has claimed some 13,000 lives since 2014.
In a pro-Western country of 45 million that firmly rejected its Soviet past a significant number of people plan to vote for Boyko or other pro-Russian figures. Of the 39 presidential candidates, roughly four including Boyko are Russia-friendly. None stands a chance of winning the crucial presidential election on March 31 but their combined support among voters stands at around 15 percent.
Polls put the 60-year-old former deputy prime minister Boyko in fourth place with more than 10 percent, behind the three most popular candidates led by actor and comedian Volodymyr Zelensky.
While the top three contenders — including President Petro Poroshenko — run on promises of closer ties with the West, Boyko insists that restoring political and economic ties with arch-foe Russia is important, too. “We should have an absolutely pragmatic course,” said Boyko, who won 0.19 percent of the vote during a presidential election in 2014.
“We should act in the interests of the country — in some areas we will restore our relations with Russia for sure, we have lost this market,” he told AFP. This week Boyko travelled to Moscow for high-profile economic talks with Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, sparking Poroshenko’s anger.
Friday’s talks centred on the importance of resumption of cooperation including in the gas sphere and included energy giant Gazprom chief Alexei Miller and Ukrainian politician Viktor Medvedchuk, who claims President Vladimir Putin is godfather to one of his daughters. “They are discussing economy while our boys are dying on the frontlines,” a seething Poroshenko said of the Moscow talks.
Boyko, a former member of Yanukovich’s largely moribund Party of Regions, also contradicts Kiev’s line by insisting on direct talks with Kremlin-backed separatists. Mykhailo, who lives in the government-held port city of Mariupol in eastern Ukraine, also said he would vote for Boyko.
“The current authorities did not allow opposition forces to develop,” said the 63-year-old pensioner, who declined to give his last name for fear of reprisals. “Even under Yanukovych the opposition had more opportunities than now.” The newly established Orthodox Church of Ukraine — which has recently won independence from Moscow — this month warned voters against supporting candidates who appear to promote peace but in fact urge them to “surrender to the enemy.”
Cho said better ties were in the “common interests” of both countries
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Harry, 39, is a former army captain and served as an Apache helicopter pilot with the Army Air Corps in Afghanistan