The Guardian Australia

The Guardian view on Belarus: an Olympic athlete joins the exodus

- Editorial

Alexander Lukashenko has largely squeezed the life out of the protest movement that threatened his despotic hold on power last summer. As he has done so, a vicious, totalitari­an mood has come to dominate all corners of life in Belarus. Earlier this month, there was a sweeping crackdown on NGOs, many of which were previously judged nonpolitic­al. Independen­t media organisati­ons have been harassed and shut down. The essential illegitima­cy of Mr Lukashenko’s regime was exposed in the aftermath of the stolen elections of 2020. Its survival is now ensured by the brutal crushing of dissent wherever it is found.

Even at the Tokyo Olympics. The decision on Sunday by the Belarusian athlete Krystsina Tsimanousk­aya to seek asylum in Poland followed what was ostensibly a sporting dispute. Ms Tsimanousk­aya had publicly criticised the Belarus team’s coaches for failing to conduct the necessary doping tests ahead of the women’s 4x400m race. When she refused to be sent home in disgrace, a leaked tape revealed that a member of the Belarus delegation had told her: “Let this situation go. Otherwise

the more that you struggle, it will be like a fly caught in a spider’s web: the more it spins, the more it gets entangled.” If the chilling menace contained in these words seems disproport­ionate, the tone probably comes from the top: the head of the Belarus National Olympic Committee is Mr Lukashenko’s son Viktor.

Ms Tsimanousk­aya is under police protection in Tokyo. Her husband, Arseniy Zdanevich, has fled the Belarusian capital, Minsk, for Kiev. When making what seems to have been a snap decision on Sunday night, the sprinter doubtless recalled the fate of the Belarusian athletes who have been detained for taking part in protests against Mr Lukashenko. Numerous others, deemed suspect, have been dropped from teams. Sport, like other aspects of Belarusian life, is now run in the paranoid style.

The 24-year-old Ms Tsimanousk­aya, who on Monday received a humanitari­an visa from Poland, will clearly be a sporting loss for her country. She will also become part of an era-defining exodus from Mr Lukashenko’s Belarus that makes it hard to be optimistic about the future. As the regime has consolidat­ed its grip over the past year through mass arrests, torture and a crackdown across civil society, huge numbers of younger Belarusian­s have sought refuge in neighbouri­ng Lithuania, Ukraine and Poland. The formerly booming tech sector in Minsk – an organisati­onal hub for the protests – has been particular­ly badly hit. As many as 15,000 IT workers may have fled the country. Giving up, for now, on the prospect of democratic reform, many other young profession­als have taken the same decision. As European and US sanctions continue to be ineffectiv­e, and Vladimir Putin stands ready to offer assistance to the regime as required, who can blame them?

Mr Lukashenko, of course, will not be sorry to wave goodbye as he recreates Belarusian society in the oppressive image of a Soviet satellite state. For the remaining remnants of the protest movement, Ms Tsimanousk­aya’s decision to join those seeking asylum is yet another sign of how dark the times have become, following those days of hope last summer and autumn.

 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? ‘Krystsina Tsimanousk­aya will become part of an era-defining exodus from Mr Lukashenko’s Belarus that makes it hard to be optimistic about the future.’
Photograph: Reuters ‘Krystsina Tsimanousk­aya will become part of an era-defining exodus from Mr Lukashenko’s Belarus that makes it hard to be optimistic about the future.’

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