Belarus' leader of 26 years warns against election protests
Belarus' leader of 26 years warns against election protests
The authoritarian leader of Belarus warned political opponents Thursday that authorities won't allow any unsanctioned demonstrations following the weekend election in which he is seeking a sixth consecutive term.

MINSK, Belarus The authoritarian leader of Belarus warned political opponents Thursday that authorities won’t allow any unsanctioned demonstrations following the weekend election in which he is seeking a sixth consecutive term.

President Alexander Lukashenko, who has ruled the ex-Soviet nation with an iron hand for 26 years, is facing an upsurge in opposition protests fueled by the worsening economy and the Belarusian government’s botched response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Election officials barred Lukashenko’s two main challengers from the race, leaving a former English teacher who is the wife of a jailed opposition blogger as the candidate trying to unseat the president. But Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, 37, has managed to unite the fragmented opposition in Belarus and drawn tens of thousands to her campaign rallies.

Police have detained over 1,360 participants in opposition protests since the start of the campaign in May, according to the Viasna human rights center in Belarus.

Looking increasingly nervous in the face of the anti-government protests, Lukashenko, 65, met with his top security officials Thursday and warned against any attempts to stage demonstrations after Sunday’s vote. The opposition staged rallies after previous elections to protest the outcome as rigged, and is expected to try to do the same if the president wins again this time.

God save us from setting up a fire in the center of Minsk, he said at the meeting. We can’t and will not allow that to happen.

The Belarusian leader described the protests already held as part of a hybrid war waged by antagonists, charging that the West, Ukraine and even his country’s main ally, Russia, all could be interested in destabilizing his government.

A hybrid war is being waged against Belarus, and we should expect nasty tricks from any side, Lukasenko said.

Last week, Belarusian authorities arrested 33 Russian private security contractors on charges of planning to stage mass riots in the country ahead of the presidential election. Investigators have alleged a link between them and Tsikhanouskaya’s jailed husband, accusations she has dismissed.

Moscow has demanded the contractors’ quick release, saying the Russians stayed in Belarus after missing their connecting flight to another country. The Kremlin has been particularly irked by Belarus touting the prospect of handing over some of the contractors to Ukraine, which wants to prosecute them on charges of fighting alongside Russia-backed separatists in the country’s east.

Dmitry Medvedev, deputy head of Russia’s Security Council, accused the Belarusian leadership of trying to cast Russia as an enemy for electoral purposes and warned Wednesday that the action would have sad consequences for bilateral ties.

Lukashenko dismissed Moscow’s warning.

Don’t try to scare us with consequences, he said.

The president on Thursday invited top prosecutors from Russia and Ukraine to visit Belarus to deal with the arrested Russian contractors.

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Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow contributed to this report.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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