Times Colonist

Thousands in Belarus form ‘lines of solidarity’

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MINSK, Belarus — Crowds of protesters in Belarus swarmed the streets and thousands of workers rallied outside industrial plants Thursday to denounce a police crackdown on demonstrat­ions over a disputed election that extended the 26-year rule of authoritar­ian President Alexander Lukashenko.

Beginning in the morning, hundreds of women formed long “lines of solidarity” in several areas of the capital, Minsk. Many were dressed in white and carried flowers and portraits of loved ones who have been detained during protests that began shortly after Sunday’s vote, which they said was rigged.

The human chains grew throughout the day, filling the main central squares and avenues as motorists honked in support. In Minsk and many other cities, thousands of factory workers also rallied against the police violence, raising the prospect of strikes in a new challenge to the government.

Amid growing public dismay, dozens of military and police veterans posted videos in which they dumped their uniforms and insignia in the trash. Several popular anchors at Belarus’ state TV stations have quit.

Nearly 7,000 people have been detained and hundreds injured in the clampdown on demonstrat­ors prot esting the official results that said Lukashenko won 80% of the vote and his top opposition challenger got only 10%. Police have broken up protests with stun grenades, tear gas, rubber bullets and severe beatings.

“Belarusian­s have seen the villainous face of this government. I argued with my husband and voted for Lukashenko. And this is what I got in the end — I can’t find my relatives in prisons,” said Valentina Chailytko, 49, whose husband and son were detained in protests Sunday. She has been unable to get any informatio­n on their whereabout­s.

One protester died Monday in Minsk after, the Interior Ministry says, an explosive device he tried to throw at police blew up in his hand. Some media reports have challenged that official version. Neither the ministry nor the media outlets have provided evidence.

Thousands of people converged Thursday on the place where he died, many carrying flowers. European ambassador­s also laid flowers at the site earlier in the day. The authoritie­s also confirmed that a detainee died in the southeaste­rn city of Gomel, but the circumstan­ces of his death weren’t immediatel­y clear.

Hundreds of medical workers joined the demonstrat­ions Thursday in Minsk and many other cities. “There is a feeling that a war is going on, but it’s a war against us,” said Mikhail Portnov, a 33-year old general practition­er. “We, doctors, see the price of this war as no one else. We were ready for violence, but the brutality of it has crossed all limits.”

The unpreceden­ted public opposition and unrest has been driven by the painful economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic and Lukashenko’s swaggering dismissal of the outbreak as a “psychosis.” The vote and the brutality of the subsequent crackdown — remarkable even for Lukashenko’s iron-fisted rule — have made the anger boil over. The 65-year-old former state farm director has been in power since 1994 and was nicknamed “Europe’s last dictator” by the West for his suppressio­n of dissent.

“You can see the election result in the streets,” said 32-year old engineer Andrei Gubarevich, who joined a demonstrat­ion in Minsk. “Lukashenko has already lost.”

Belarus’ Investigat­ive Committee launched a criminal probe into the organizati­on of mass rioting — an indication authoritie­s may start levelling those charges against some detainees. The charges could carry prison terms of up to 15 years for those found guilty.

The ministry said 103 police officers have been injured since Sunday, and 28 of them were hospitaliz­ed. In Minsk and the western city of Baranovich­i, people ran over traffic police with their vehicles on Wednesday before being detained.

The brutal suppressio­n of protests drew harsh criticism in the West. The European

Union foreign ministers are set to meet today to discuss a response, and German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said the 27-nation bloc would “increase the pressure” on Belarus.

“The brutal actions and the arrest of peaceful protesters and even journalist­s in Belarus isn’t acceptable in Europe in the 21st century,” he told reporters in Berlin.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the election wasn’t free or fair and urged the government to refrain from violence against peaceful protesters. “I’m confident that EU and the United States fully share the same concerns about what has taken place and what is taking place in Belarus and I’m very hopeful that we can collective­ly work in a way that gets a better outcome for the people of Belarus,” Pompeo said Thursday on a visit to Slovenia.

Police appeared to scale back their response on Wednesday. In many parts of Minsk, the all-female “lines of solidarity” stood unchalleng­ed for some time before police dispersed some of them without violence. Similar peaceful demonstrat­ions were seen across the capital and other cities Thursday, but police refrained from dispersing them immediatel­y.

Also Thursday, hundreds of workers at plants across the country, including the huge truck factories in Minsk and Zhodino, held rallies to protest the clampdown and demand a recount of the vote. Many shouted “Go away!” to demand Lukashenko’s resignatio­n.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Teenagers sit watching as people gather in a street protesting the election results in Minsk, Belarus this week. The demonstrat­ors are contesting the official count showing President Alexander Lukashenko winning a sixth term with 80% of Sunday's vote, with crowds taking to the streets every night since to demand a recount.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Teenagers sit watching as people gather in a street protesting the election results in Minsk, Belarus this week. The demonstrat­ors are contesting the official count showing President Alexander Lukashenko winning a sixth term with 80% of Sunday's vote, with crowds taking to the streets every night since to demand a recount.

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