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- By Carol J. Williams cwilliams@tribune.com

KIEV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s election authoritie­s said Saturday that they are unable to operate polling places for Sunday’s presidenti­al election in areas representi­ng about 10 percent of the population and that separatist threats against anyone trying to cast ballots in the violence-plagued east could further deter turnout.

Pro-Russian militants who hold key government buildings and broadcast facilities in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions also appeared to have tightened their grip on the dozen or so communitie­s they control at gunpoint, according to government officials and internatio­nal security monitors.

Ukrainians will go to the polls to choose from among 21 contenders for head of state to succeed President Viktor Yanukovych, who was ousted in February after a three-month rebellion against his decision to scrap closer ties to the European Union in favor of continued economic integratio­n with Russia.

Yanukovych, a Kremlin ally, has taken refuge in Russia and is accused by Kiev’s interim authoritie­s and their Western backers of helping foment the pro-Russia aggression that resulted in the seizure and annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and has allowed armed separatist­s to take control of the largely Russian-speaking eastern regions.

Polls show billionair­e candy magnate Petro Poroshenko with a huge lead over his nearest competitor, former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. More than 40 percent of those surveyed say they will vote for Poroshenko, with Tymoshenko drawing around 6 percent, about the same as Sergiy Tigipko, who advocates stronger rights for Ukraine’s Russian-speaking minority. If no candidate gets more than 50 percent of the vote, a runoff would be scheduled for June 15 between the two top vote-getters.

Acting Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk made a televised appeal for maximum voter turnout and sought to assure those unable to cast ballots in the separatist-occupied areas that their isolation would end soon.

“Criminals won’t terrorize your land for long,” Yatsenyuk said

Early Saturday, Volodymyr Hrinyak, chief of the public security department at the Ukrainian Interior Ministry, told the Interfax news agency that half of the two regions’ 34 polling places would be open for voters Sunday. But hours later, the head of the Voters Committee of Ukraine, Oleksandr Chernenko, conceded that separatist­s had overrun as many as 10 more on the eve of the election, predicting that only seven to nine polls would be operating for the two regions with a combined population of 6.5 million, or 15 percent of the country’s population since the loss of Crimea.

Monitors from the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe also reported a significan­t falloff in peaceful protest actions against the separatist­s organized by mining and steel magnate Rinat Akhmetov in Donetsk over the pastweek.

In Mariupol, where Akhmetov’s steelworke­rs joined police patrols last week to deter the spread of militant control in the port city, election organizers were unable to set up voting places because of threatened attacks by the gunmen who have apparently retaken control. OSCE said factory whistles and ships’ sirens wailed in the city as part of the protests organized by Akhmetov, whose enterprise­s employ 300,000 people, but that there was no sign of the magnate’s Met invest employees patrolling the streets.

 ?? DAN KITWOOD/GETTY PHOTO ?? People perform traditiona­l songs and pray for a peaceful presidenti­al election during a gathering Saturday in Kiev, Ukraine, a day before voters will pick among 21 candidates.
DAN KITWOOD/GETTY PHOTO People perform traditiona­l songs and pray for a peaceful presidenti­al election during a gathering Saturday in Kiev, Ukraine, a day before voters will pick among 21 candidates.

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