}
By Reuters

KIEV – Ukrainians voted on Sunday in an election expected to thrust a comedian with no prior political experience and few detailed policies into the presidency of a nation at war and hungry for change, according to a report by Reuters.

At stake is the leadership of a country on the frontline of the Westโ€™s standoff with Russia following Moscowโ€™s annexation of Crimea and support for a pro-Russian insurgency in eastern Ukraine.

Surveys make Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who plays a fictitious president in a TV series, the runaway favorite to defeat incumbent Petro Poroshenko, whose popularity has been hurt by patchy efforts to halt corruption and sliding living standards.

Both men – who traded insults and accusations in a rowdy debate in a soccer stadium in Kiev on Friday – have pledged to keep Ukraine on a pro-Western course.

But a victory for Zelenskiy would be a dramatic departure for a country whose previous presidents since its 1991 independence have been experienced politicians, including three former prime ministers.

Exit polls are due at 1700 GMT.

Investors are seeking reassurances that whoever wins will accelerate reforms needed to attract foreign investment and keep the country in an International Monetary Fund program that has supported Ukraine through war, recession and a currency plunge.

โ€œWe want change in a better direction, because right now there is tension, people are irritated. We want peace, freedom and happiness,โ€ said voter Zinaida Statnikova.

A smiling Zelenskiy turned up to vote dressed in a white T-shirt and jacket. โ€œWe have united Ukraine,โ€ he said. No matter the result, โ€œit will be a victory for the Ukrainian peopleโ€.

Poroshenko meanwhile attended an Orthodox service at Kievโ€™s gold-domed St Michaelโ€™s monastery, a member of a new national church that Poroshenko helped establish.

Ukrainian presidential candidate Volodymyr Zelenskiy demonstrates his ballot while standing in front of the media at a polling station during the second round of a presidential election in Kiev, Ukraine April 21, 2019. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko

โ€œIt is very important to be guided by reason during the vote. Because itโ€™s not funny. At first maybe it seems funny and fun, but it should not be painful later,โ€ he said after voting.

Voter Egor Binkevych wants a candidate to at least try to tackle the issue of corruption. โ€œMore than anything I would like for the structure of our country to change, the whole system,โ€ he said.

The 41-year-old Zelenskiyโ€™s unorthodox campaign traded on the character he plays in the TV show, a scrupulously honest schoolteacher who becomes president by accident after an expletive-ridden rant about corruption goes viral.

His campaign relied on quirky social media posts and comedy gigs instead of traditional rallies and leafletting.

Zelenskiy has promised to fight corruption, a message that has resonated with Ukrainians fed up with the status quo in a country of 42 million people that is one of Europeโ€™s poorest nearly three decades after breaking away from the Soviet Union.

He has also spoken of the need to try to find a way to end the war against pro-Russian separatists by holding wider Western-backed talks with President Vladimir Putin.

NO CONFIDENCE IN GOVERNMENT

Zelenskiyโ€™s rise comes at a time of political upheaval in many parts of the world, from Brexit to the election of U.S. President Donald Trump, the 5-Star Movement in Italy – also inspired by a comedian – and the rise of the far right there, in France and in Spain.

Just 9 percent of Ukrainians have confidence in their national government, the lowest of any electorate in the world, according to a Gallup poll published in March.

โ€œI think the top election issue is frustration with the status quo,โ€ said Mary Oโ€™Hagan, Ukraine Resident Senior Director of the National Democratic Institute (NDI).

Poroshenko was elected amid high hopes for change. Oโ€™Hagan says he inherited a difficult situation. He implemented many reforms, but did not convince voters he was serious about tackling corruption, she said.

Meanwhile, Zelenskiy remains something of an unknown quantity and faces scrutiny over his ties to a powerful oligarch called Ihor Kolomoisky, whose TV channel broadcasts his shows.

Poroshenko calls Zelenskiy a โ€œpuppetโ€ of Kolomoisky and the comedian has been forced to fend off suggestions he might help Kolomoisky win compensation or regain ownership of PrivatBank, Ukraineโ€™s largest lender, which was nationalized in 2016.

Poroshenko, 53, has also sought to portray Zelenskiy as a buffoonish populist whose incompetence would leave Ukraine vulnerable to Russia.

Ukrainian troops have battled Kremlin-backed separatist fighters since 2014 in a conflict in the eastern Donbass region that has killed 13,000 people despite a notional ceasefire.

Viktor Medvedchuk, the Kremlinโ€™s closest ally in Ukraine, last week outlined ways in which Ukraine and Russia could mend ties in the event of a Zelenskiy presidency, though Zelenskiy has given no indication of being open to the offer.


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