* Referendum on Ukraine-EU treaty gets under way
* Result valid only if 30 percent of voters turn out
* Exit poll result expected 1900 GMT Wednesday

Dutch voters began casting ballots in a national referendum on Wednesday on the European Union's treaty with Ukraine -- a test of anti-EU sentiment before Britain vote on its membership of the bloc in June.

Dutch politicians say rejecting a treaty intended to bring Ukraine closer to the European Union would hand a symbolic victory to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine are widely accused of bringing down an airliner in 2014 with the loss of almost 200 Dutch lives.

Launched by eurosceptic groups, the referendum - whose result the government would be obliged to consider but not  enforce - is the first in the country since a 2015 law made it possible to force through plebiscites by gathering 300,000 signatures on the Internet.

The ‘no’ vote led in surveys, but turnout estimates hover around just 30 percent, the minimum needed for a valid result, on an issue with little national significance.

In addition, few believe that the Ukraine treaty, which has already provisionally gone into effect with the approval of the 27 other EU member states, can be derailed.

Polling stations opened at 0530 GMT. First exit polls are expected immediately after stations close at 1900 GMT.

If the referendum result is not valid, or the ‘yes’ vote wins, the process is likely to be written off.

But if voters return a valid ‘no’ vote less than three months before a British referendum on whether to quit the EU, it could escalate into a domestic or even a European political crisis.

Prime Minister Mark Rutte's already unpopular government has lost further ground over Europe's refugee debate, and ignoring a ‘no’ vote would be risky with national elections scheduled no later than March 2017.

‘It's an advisory referendum, so the only thing the law requires is that we reconsider it,’ Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem said on Tuesday.

In parliament, Rutte's conservative VVD party has said it would ignore a narrow ‘no’ vote, while junior coalition partner Labour has said it would honour it, setting the stage for a split.

In theory, the Cabinet could use an overwhelming ‘no’ vote to ask the EU to reopen negotiations with Ukraine to alter the treaty, though a collapse of Rutte's coalition seems more likely.

 

 

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