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Ukraine's
pro-Moscow opposition leader Viktor Yanukovych appears to be heading
for a narrow victory in the country's presidential election, BBC
reports.
But with more than 90% of the votes counted, PM Yulia
Tymoshenko has closed the gap to 2.2% on her rival.
Mr Yanukovych called on Mrs Tymoshenko to quit, but
she refused and is expected to challenge the result.
The results suggest a remarkable comeback after Mr
Yanukovych was swept aside by the 2004 "Orange Revolution".
Under the 59-year-old former mechanic, Ukraine's
foreign policy is expected to become more pro-Russian.
The BBC's Richard Galpin in Kiev says a Yanukovych
win would be an extraordinary indictment of the pro-Western Orange
Revolution leaders' failure to deliver on their promises, which has left
people deeply disillusioned.
Politics in Ukraine has now gone full circle, our
correspondent adds.
Mr Yanukovych was a presidential candidate in the
last election in 2004, which was found to have been rigged in his
favour.
Mrs Tymoshenko's impassioned leadership of the
subsequent street protests that swept him from power - and thrust her to
office, along with Viktor Yushchenko - made her an international
celebrity.
Incumbent President Viktor Yushchenko lost in the
first round of the election last month.
With more than 94% of votes counted, Ukraine's
electoral commission put Mr Yanukovych ahead with some 48.3% of the
vote, ahead of Mrs Tymoshenko at around 46.1%.
If confirmed, it would be a narrower margin of
victory than Mr Yanukovych had been hoping for.
Mr Yanukovych has already congratulated his
supporters and said he will deliver the change the country is yearning
for.
He reportedly said it was time for his rival to quit.
"I think that Yulia Tymoshenko should prepare to
resign. She understands that well," Interfax-Ukraine quoted him as
saying in a television interview.
"In any case, I believe such a suggestion will be
put to her."
But Mrs Tymoshenko, 49, showed no sign of standing
down.
In a news conference, she said her team was
conducting a "parallel count" and urged them to "fight for every result,
every document, every vote", reports Reuters news agency.
The election commission is not due to release
preliminary results until Monday morning, but our correspondent in
Ukraine says exit polls there are generally accurate.
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