Millennium Post

Comedian poised to take over presidency in Ukraine

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KIEV: Ukrainians went to polls Sunday in the second round of an extraordin­ary election with a comedian who plays a president on TV expected to win in a stunning rebuke to the political establishm­ent.

Forty-one-year-old Volodymyr Zelensky’s bid to lead the country of 45 million people was initially dismissed as a joke when he announced his candidacy on New Year’s Eve.

But now all opinion polls suggest incumbent President Petro Poroshenko is heading for defeat amid widespread anger over poverty, corruption and war.

Zelensky’s victory is expected to open a new chapter in the history of a country that has gone through two popular uprisings in two decades and is mired in a five-year conflict with separatist­s in the east.

Polling stations opened at 0500 GMT as voters from Ukrainian-speaking regions in the west to Russian-speaking regions in the war-torn east went to cast their ballots.

Speaking outside a polling booth in the capital Kiev, Galyna, 81, said she voted for Zelensky.

“Because I am against Poroshenko,” said the pensioner who refused to give her last name.

Zelensky has tapped into widespread frustratio­n over graft, poverty and a conflict with separatist­s that has claimed some 13,000 lives.

But others doubted whether the consummate showman would be able to take on the country’s vested interests, negotiate with the likes of German Chancellor Angela Merkel and stand up to Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

Viktoriya Olomutska in Kiev suggested many voted for teacher-turned-president Vasyl Goloborodk­o, Zelensky’s character in the popular TV show “Servant of the People”, now in its third season and available on Netflix.

“People have gone mad,” said the 39-year-old Poroshenko supporter, adding many pinned their hopes on “a fictional character”.

Seventy-eight-year-old Maria said it was incomprehe­nsible to her that a majority supported Zelensky.

“There cannot be so many fools in the country,” she fumed.

“But no, apparently there are!”

A survey by the Rating pollster this week showed Zelensky winning 73 per cent of the vote against 27 per cent for Poroshenko.

Exit poll results are expected at 1700 GMT and the first preliminar­y results several hours later.

The stakes are high for a country dependent on internatio­nal aid and seen as a buffer between the European Union and Russia.

Poroshenko, 53, has argued Zelensky is a political novice unfit to be a war-time commander-in-chief. On Saturday, Poroshenko made a last-ditch plea to voters, begging Ukrainians to think twice before backing his rival.

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