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Tension high ahead of Ukraine poll


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Yushchenko embraces Ukrainian singer Ruslana at a Wednesday rally.
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The contenders in the Ukrainan presidential election rematch pull no punches

Opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko loses his face

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KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukraine's presidential rivals wrapped up their campaigns Friday as tension mounted ahead of Sunday's rerun election.

The election is a rerun of a November 21 vote officially won by Viktor Yanukovich, but later annulled by the Supreme Court after international observers reported widespread fraud and irregularities.

Outgoing President Leonid Kuchma said the vote "will likely be the most important day in Ukraine's existence" and told his security chiefs late Thursday: "I say without exaggeration that this election round will greatly influence Ukraine's fate."

The eleventh-hour push for votes by Western-leaning opposition leader Yushchenko and his pro-Russian rival, Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich, came after Russian President Vladimir Putin again attacked the West's "double standards" in Ukraine and elsewhere in the former Soviet Union.

At his annual press conference at the Kremlin, Putin said he would ask U.S. President George W. Bush whether the West was purposely seeking to isolate Russia from other states that were once part of the Soviet Union.

Ukrainian law forbids campaigning on a day before an election, leaving Yushchenko and Yanukovich with only Friday to get their message out before polling day.

Yushchenko was scheduled to hold a news conference in Kiev at 12:30 p.m. (1030 GMT) and to make a televised speech late Friday while Yanukovich, who delivered his own nationally-televised speech on Thursday night, was due to campaign in the western city of Uzhgorod.

Doctors confirmed earlier this month that the mysterious illness that forced Yushchenko off the campaign trail in September was caused by a dioxin, which left his face pockmarked, puffy and scarred.

Yushchenko claimed he was poisoned at a dinner with top State Security Service officials.

Prosecutors and a parliamentary committee have launched an investigation. The security service has denied involvement and expressed its willingness to participate in the probe. (Full story)

Yushchenko and Yanukovich are battling to take over the helm after 10 years of rule by Kuchma.

Observers say the outcome of their contest will determine whether the nation, sandwiched between the European Union and Russia, will turn westwards or remain in Moscow's orbit.

Yushchenko, 50, tends to be more pro-Western, advocating eventual membership for Ukraine in the NATO military alliance and the European Union. Yanukovich, 54, favors Ukraine keeping closer ties to Russia and has the backing of Putin.

Yushchenko, the hero of the "orange revolution" that shook Ukraine and echoed throughout the world, has a comfortable 14-point lead in opinion polls over Yanukovich, whose political fortunes tumbled after he was stripped of his victory.

The two men have competed to get their message out to the voters via the media in the past few days.

"My hand will always defend your interests," Yushchenko assured residents in eastern Ukraine, where support for his opponent is strong and resentment over the "orange revolution" widespread.

"Have no doubt, be it a question of language or confession ... I would like to say firmly that your interests will form a basis for my actions," he said in a television interview late Thursday.

Yanukovich meanwhile called on voters to back his vision of Ukraine instead of the "scary image" of the opposition and vowed to stay in politics.

"I am not going to leave politics," he said in a taped message. "I cannot shirk my responsibility for the country."


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