| March 2006 |
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"We established a great deal of violations at polling stations, particularly discrepancies in electoral lists, said the press secretary of party leader Viktor Yanukovich, who had lost the re-run of the disputed 2004 presidential election that resulted in the "orange revolution" and the incumbent pro-Western authorities' coming to power. 
"There are the instances of damaging ballot-boxes, voting outside booths and even exerting pressure on electors," the committee said. The committee has received dozens of such reports from various regions of the country. 
"The relations will be excellent, I am absolutely convinced in that," said Viktor Yanukovich, the leader of the country's largest opposition Party of Regions.
"Consultations are starting between the forces that won in the 'orange revolution' to formulate the principles of talks," the president said, adding that he expected maximal consolidation.
"Ukraine wants the situation in Belarus, its closest neighbor, to be calm. Now time has come to think about a second step," Lytvyn said. 
Ukraine goes to the polls Sunday in crucial parliamentary elections that could determine whether the revolutionary fervor that gripped the nation a little over a year ago has fizzled out or is still strong enough to break a parliamentary deadlock that largely paralyzed lawmaking in the last few months. 



