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, cost 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. 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. The Russian word used, , () (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.
Seizure of pre-marked ballots 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. 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.
Voting fraud 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. CNN reported seeing some voters vote more than once at ballot boxes. The BBC filmed a woman putting two ballot papers into the same ballot 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.
Lack of polling stations 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. In Mariupol, a city of 500,000, only four voting stations were open; These results could not be independently verified. Chairman
Denis Pushilin announced immediately after the referendum 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." == Referendum in Luhansk Oblast ==