Referendums on the status of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts,
parts of Ukraine that together make up the Donbass region, took place on 11 May 2014
in many towns under the control of the self-proclaimed Donetsk
and Luhansk
People's Republics. These referendums sought to legitimise the establishment of
the republics, in the context of the rising
pro-Russian unrest in the aftermath of the 2014 Ukrainian
revolution. In addition, a counter-referendum on accession to Dnipropetrovsk
Oblast was held in some Ukrainian-controlled parts of Donetsk and
Luhansk oblasts.
The
results of the separatist referendums were not officially recognised by any
government, including those of Ukraine,
the United States, the countries of the European Union, and Russia. Germany and the United States stated that
the referendums had "no democratic legitimacy", while the Russian
government expressed "respect" for the results and urged a
"civilised" implementation.
INTERNET
SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donbass_status_referendums,_2014
Background
Main
articles: 2014 pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine
and 2014 Crimean crisis
The
referendums were modelled on a similar disputed referendum held in
Crimea during the Crimean crisis. That vote ultimately resulted
in the annexation of Crimea
by the Russian Federation.
The
Ukrainian transitional president Olexander Turchynov said that the proclamation
of the republics, along with protests in other eastern cities, was evidence of
a "second stage" of Russian operations "playing out the Crimean
scenario". After its proclamation, the self-proclaimed authorities of the
Donetsk People's Republic announced that they would carry out a referendum on
11 May to determine the future status of the region, and legitimise the
establishment of the Republic. Many government buildings in towns and cities
across Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts became occupied by separatist insurgents as
the Republic expanded its territorial control. As a result, the Ukrainian
government launched a counter-offensive against insurgents in some parts of
Donetsk Oblast.
An agreement made in Geneva between the
United
States, European Union, Russia, and Ukraine was
intended to demilitarise and de-escalate the conflict, but the leaders of the
republics rejected it. They stated that Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov did not represent them, and that an agreement made by uninvolved
parties was not binding on their behaviour. Instead, they said that they would
only end their occupation of government buildings after the referendums. The
referendums took place as mounting anger rose against the so-called
"anti-terrorist" operations by Ukrainian forces against separatists,
which resulted in civilian casualties.
Russian
president Vladimir Putin publicly asked pro-Russian
separatists to postpone the proposed referendums to create the necessary
conditions for dialogue on 7 May. Despite Putin's comments, the self-proclaimed
authorities of Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic said
they would still carry out the referendum. That day a principal of a secondary
school in Luhansk was kidnapped by four masked gunmen, local police told the
Interfax news agency.
Public opinion
A
poll released by the Kyiv Institute of Sociology, with data gathered from 8–16
April, 41.1% of people in Donetsk were for decentralisation of Ukraine with
powers transferred to regions, while letting it remain a unified state, 38.4%
for changing Ukraine into federation, 27.5% were in favour of secession from
Ukraine to join the Russian Federation, and only 10.6% supported current
unitary structure without changes.
Another
poll, taken by the Donetsk Institute for Social Research and Political
Analysis, found that 18.6% of those polled in the region opposed changes to the
government structure, 47% favoured federalisation, or at least more economic
independence from Kiev, 27% wanted to join Russia in some form, and 5% wanted
to become an independent state.
According
to a survey conducted by Pew Research Centre from 5–23 April, 18% of eastern
Ukrainians were in favour of secession, while 70% wished to remain part of a
united Ukraine.
While
early polls in April reported that supporters of independence were a small
minority, the Los Angeles Times reported that the later violence in Odessa and Mariupol
turned many against the Ukrainian transitional government.
An
opinion poll that was taken on the day of the referendum and the day before by
a correspondent of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung,
the Washington Post, and five other media outlets
found that of those people who intended to vote, 94.8% would vote for
independence. The poll did not claim to have scientific precision, but was
carried out to get a basis from which to judge the outcome of the referendum,
given that independent observers were not present to monitor it. Even with
those who said they would not vote counted in, a 65.6% majority supported
separation from Ukraine.
Legitimacy
According
to article 73 of the 1996 Constitution of Ukraine, and article 3 of
the 2012 law on referendums, territorial changes can only be
approved via a referendum if all citizens of the Ukraine are allowed to vote,
including those that do not reside in the area.
During
the referendum in Crimea, the Central Election Commission of
Ukraine also stated that there was no possibility for regional authorities
to initiate such a referendum, according to Ukrainian legislation.
Allegations of fraud
The
Security Service of Ukraine (SBU)
released an audio recording on 5 May that they said was a phone call between a
Donetsk separatist leader and the leader of the far-right paramilitary Russian National Unity group Alexander Barkashov. In the recording, the
separatist said he wanted to postpone the referendum, due to the DPR's
inability to control all of Donetsk Oblast. Barkashov said that he had
communicated with Putin, and insisted on holding the referendum regardless of
the separatist leader's concerns. He instructed the separatists to tabulate the
results as 89% in favour of autonomy. Separatists stated that the recording was
fake.
Swiss
left-wing newspaper Tages-Anzeiger reported that voters were able to
vote as many times as they wanted. Internal Affairs ministry officials branded
the vote a farce, and said that just over 32 percent of registered voters in
Donetsk Oblast participated in the vote.
According
to Andrei Buzin, co-chair of GOLOS
Association, there were significant irregularities in the organisation and
holding of the referendum.
Referendum
in Donetsk Oblast
Organisation
A
central election committee was set up to organise the referendum. Fifty-five
local election committees, and 2,279 polling stations were to be established to
carry it out. A number of towns refused to hold the referendum.
To
cover all the region's registered voters, 3.2 million voting ballots needed to
be produced. They began to be printed on 29 April, and printing continued for
eight days after that. The ballots used had no protective features to prevent
mass-duplication, and were printed with standard commercial printers.
Officials
from the Donetsk regional administration said that the separatists would
require at least 85 million US dollars to fund the referendum, and that it
would cost at least 8 million for Donetsk city
alone. According to authorities from the republic, however, the budget of the
referendum was minimal, mostly being composed of donations from private
citizens and businesses. Ballots, for example, costed only 9,000 US dollars to
produce.
By
10 May, fifty-three local election committees and 1,527 polling stations had
been established. The Donetsk regional education superintendent informed reporters that
they were forced under threat of death to organise polling stations in the
schools.
Two
official electoral commissioners were kidnapped by separatists prior to the
vote.
Question
The
chairman of the DPR, Denis Pushilin, said
that the ballots were printed in both Russian
and Ukrainian, and asked one question: "Do you
support the declaration of state independence of the Donetsk People's
Republic?" The Russian word used, самостоятельность, (samostoyatel'nost)
(literally "standing by oneself"), can be translated as either full
independence or broad autonomy, which left voters confused about what their
ballot actually meant. One polling station manager interviewed by VICE
News insisted the vote had nothing to do with secession.
Polling
day
The
day before the referendum, it was reported in Ukrainian media that a group of
pro-Russian separatists in possession of a 100,000 ballots already marked with
a 'yes' vote for the referendum were captured during the ongoing government
"anti-terrorist" operation, and that the ballots were seized by
government forces. Local news reported that polling in some occupied schools
had already begun a day in advance.
A
campaign of intimidation, beatings, and hostage taking has forced many
pro-Ukrainian activists and known opponents of secession to Russia to flee the
region, leaving the referendum to take place without any dissent or opposing
voices. At least 24 people were being held by insurgents in Donetsk region at
the time of the referendum, according to Human Rights Watch.
CNN reported seeing some voters vote more than once at ballot boxes. When
interviewing voters at a polling station in Donetsk, VICE News crew were
detained for three hours by masked men with assault rifles who demanded their
memory cards.
The
referendum began early on 10 May in Mariupol, which according to the separatist
group's election official Sergey Beshulya was due to the possibility of
Ukrainian security forces returning. Other locations also reported early voting
in some areas. For the remainder of the province, polling began at 8am on 11
May. Donetsk and Luhansk residents living in Russia were able to cast their
votes in Moscow. Non-binding votes were also cast
abroad, including in Barcelona as a show
of support. Local news sources claimed that many residents did not intend to
vote while others did not know where polling stations were located.
Many
of the voters were not on the registration lists but were allowed to vote after
showing identification documents. A CNN crew saw several people vote twice at
one polling station, and the BBC filmed the a woman putting two ballot papers
into the same box. Reporters with German newspaper Bild
followed a man that they said voted eight times. He was asked twice if he lived
in Donetsk. He answered no, which the polling officials said was not a problem.
Referendum organisers reduced the number of voting stations, leading to long
queues, which were then broadcast on Russian television as "proof"
that voter turnout was high. According to The Guardian, in Mariupol where clashes two days before the referendum
between the Ukrainian
National Guard and local anti-Kiev protesters caused the deaths of
at least 9, "there were huge queues of people, almost all of whom said
they were voting yes to separatism". In Mariupol, a city of 500,000, only
four voting stations were open.
Fighting
in Krasnoarmiisk
On
the same day, there were reports that in Krasnoarmiisk,
a unit of the Ukrainian National Guard, after being
accosted by a crowd, shot an unarmed protester who confronted them despite
repeated warnings. The shooting took place outside town hall where hours
earlier the guardsmen had shut down the voting. It resulted in one civilian
casualty from a direct shot to head and two people wounded. Paris Match
reported that Andrey Denisenko, deputy chief of Right
Sector and its acting head in the Dnipropetrovsk region, was present at the
scene and fired shots above the crowd's head from a Kalashnikov rifle. The
Ukrainian government has denied that the National Guard or any unit of its
regular forces took part in the operation and has opened a criminal
investigation into the incident. Jerome Sessini, a French war photographer who
was at the site, suggested that the gunmen might have been US mercenaries or
received training from them.
Result
The
referendum organizers stated that 2,252,867 voted in favour of self-rule, with
256,040 against, on a turnout of nearly 75%. These results could not be
independently verified. The announced result of 89% matched the number
requested by Russian politician Alexander Barkashov in a conversation that the
SBU claimed to have recorded before the poll.
Referendum in Luhansk Oblast
Question
Voters
could select yes or no in response to the question: "Do you support the
declaration of state independence of the Luhansk People's Republic?".
Result
Luhansk People's Republic authorities
stated that the turnout was 81%, however officials of the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal
Affairs estimated only 24 percent of the population eligible to vote
actually participated. Estimates said 94–98% of those who voted did so for
separation. The final results were that 96.2% voted for separation.
In
the aftermath of the voting, Russian news agency Interfax
reported that the leaders of Luhansk People's Republic demanded federalisation
of Ukraine as the only way to stop disintegration of the country.
Counter-referendum
Organisation
Seven
village councils, as well as the districts of Dobropillia
Raion and Krasnoarmiisk Raion in Donetsk Oblast requested
accession to Dnipropetrovsk Oblast. Dnipropetrovsk
governor Ihor Kolomoisky announced that local referendums would take place to
allow for his oblast to administer and provide service to cities in Donetsk and
Luhansk oblasts that wished to accede, and that he was willing to accept
absorbing the areas if that was what the local populace wanted.
The
poll, entitled "Referendum for Peace, Order, and Unity of Ukraine",
was held on 11 May to coincide with the separatist referendums. A report by Ukrinform
said that cities taking part in the referendum included Debaltseve,
Yenakiieve,
Yasynuvata,
Avdiivka, Volnovakha,
Novoazovsk
and Mariupol
in Donetsk Oblast, and Alchevsk, Stakhanov, Brianka, Sievierodonetsk,
Rubizhne, Kreminna, Starobilsk
and Svatove
in Luhansk Oblast. According to the Central Election Commission of
Ukraine (CEC), ballot boxes were mobile and polling stations were available in
all areas under control of the Ukrainian military or law enforcement.
Question
"Are
you for maintaining your territorial community within Ukraine and reunification
with the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast?"
Result
According
to CEC spokesman Mykhailo Lysenko, a total of around 2,883,000 people voted in
counter-referendum. 69.1% (1,968,619) of those polled were reported to have
voted in favour of accession to Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, 27.2% (774,912) voted against
accession to Dnipropetrovsk Oblast or separation from Ukraine as part of the
Donetsk and Luhansk republics, and 3.7% (105,411) voted for separation from
Ukraine as part of the Donetsk and Luhansk republics.
Reactions
Domestic
reaction
- Donetsk People's Republic – Chairman Denis Pushilin announced immediately after the referendum passed that the Ukrainian military must leave Donetsk. "All [Ukrainian] military troops on our territory after the official announcement of referendum results will be considered illegal and declared occupiers," Pushilin said. "It is necessary [for the Donetsk People's Republic] to form state bodies and military authorities as soon as possible."
- Former President Viktor Yanukovych, who claims to be President-in-exile, acknowledged that an "absolute majority" of citizens of the Donbass region participated in the referendums and appealed to the interim Ukrainian government to withdraw its "mercenaries and troops" from the southeast of the country and to stop "waging war against [its] own people!"
- Governor Serhiy Taruta of the Donetsk oblast called the referendum "a sham", and stated that "the Donetsk People's Republic does not exist". He went on to say that the DPR "exists in name only. They have no economic and social programs, no law enforcement".
International
reaction
- Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – Parliamentary Assembly President Ranko Krivokapic called on the separatists to cancel the referendum, saying "The idea that free and fair voting could take place in these so-called referendums is absurd. Not only are these referendums completely illegitimate in the eyes of the international community, they would be taking place amid a climate of fear, violence and lawlessness that is sure to keep many away from polling places [...] I call on the de facto authorities in Donetsk and Luhansk to call off these mockeries of a vote. All in Ukraine should instead focus on making their voices heard on 25 May, when the country elects a new president."
- Germany – A spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel said "Such a referendum, against the Ukrainian constitution, does not calm things down but escalates them." German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier issued a statement which said that the results could not be "taken seriously".
- Russian Federation – Russian president Vladimir Putin asked on 7 May for the referendum to be postponed to help create the conditions for "direct, full-fledged dialogue between the Kiev authorities and representatives of southeast Ukraine". On 12 May the Presidential Administration of Russia recognised the result and declared, that Kiev would be responsible to assimilate the result with the help of OSCE. At the same time, President Putin postponed a statement to "analyze" the result.
- Republic of Crimea - Head of the Republic of Crimea, Sergey Aksyonov recognised the right of citizens to express their will at referendums. He recognises the results of the elections and has said that the Republic of Crimea will move to establish relations with the two breakaway republics.
- United States – State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said "This is the Crimea playbook all over again. No civilized nation will recognize the results. And if Russia takes the next step to re-enact its illegal Crimea annexation in eastern or southern Ukraine and sends more forces over the border, harsh US and EU sanctions will follow."
- Sweden – Foreign Minister Carl Bildt called the results "fake results from a fake referendum" and added that "Figures from fake referendums in Eastern Ukraine likely to be fake. No way of even knowing turnout."
- Belarus - President Alexander Lukashenko declared that the Donbass status referendums "don't have any significance from a legal point of view," and promised not to allow similar scenario in his own country. However, he refused to describe the pro-Russian rebels as "separatists" and expressed his support for the negotiations. Lukashenko also warned that any attempts to deploy foreign troops to Belarus would cause the war, "even if this is Putin".
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