Western-backed Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko's fragile ruling coalition faced a major survival test today in local elections that were instantly marred as voting was cancelled in the strategic port of Mariupol.
Polling stations opened across all Kiev-administered regions accept for Mariupol -- a southeastern city of nearly 500,000 that provides a land bridge between pro-Moscow rebel regions and Ukraine's Russian-annexed Crimea peninsula.
A statement from Poroshenko's Solidarity party said the polls "were aborted... Due to the improper preparation of election ballots, the absence of control over their printing and number, and reliable storage."
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Poroshenko's party said it still hoped to conduct mayoral and regional council votes in the city in the coming weeks.
But the locals were angry and blamed the pro-Western authorities in Kiev for the abrupt disruption.
"It seem that someone wants the city to remain rudderless and without proper authorities," said 90-year-old Olena Kholodenko after being turned away at the polling station door.
The combative elections come during a lull in fighting and with worries growing that Ukraine is slipping off the global radar despite just turning into Europe's second-poorest country and still standing as a bulwark against Russia's feared expansion west.
But politicians in Ukraine were most concerned about what happens in Mariupol -- a vital outlet for the east's industrial output that had militias stationed on its northeastern outskirts throughout most of the war.
The devastated city came under a January 24 mortar and rocket attack monitors blamed on the insurgents that killed 31 civilians and wounded more than 100.


