Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Russia pressures Lukashenko to change constituti­on

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Moscow is "interested" in seeing Alexander Lukashenko push forward with modernizin­g Belarus' political system, said Russia's top diplomat Sergey Lavrov. The reforms could open the door for a new election.

While visiting Minsk on Thursday, Russia's Foreign Minister Segey Lavrov piled up pressure on Belarus strongman Alexander Lukashenko to deliver on the promise of constituti­onal reform.

Lavrov said Moscow was worried about the unrest in the smaller country, where protesters have been demanding Lukashenko's resignatio­n and accusing him of forging the results of the August election.

"We of course have an interest in the situation being calm, stable and we think that beginning the constituti­onal reform initiated by the country's leadership would contribute to this," Lavrov said.

What was Lukashenko's reform pledge?

The Belarus president has so far refused to step down, although he has hinted the government could call for a fresh election after changing the constituti­on. Lukashenko, who has been in power for over 26 years, has claimed that the country's political system has some authoritar­ian features and that a new system should be less reliant on the office of president.

He also pledged to launch such reforms during talks with

Russia's President Vladimir Putin in September. However, Lukashenko did not follow up the pledge with any concrete steps.

The protesters have dismissed the talk of reform as the president's attempt to stall them.

Trouble between Moscow and Minsk

On Thursday, Russia's Lavrov expressed hope that the situation in Belarus would normalize with the help of "the initiative of the president of Belarus on constituti­onal reforms and modernizin­g political system."

"As President Putin has repeatedly stressed, we are interested in seeing these initiative­s happen," Lavrov said.

Moscow has been backing Lukashenko throughout the latest crisis. However, cracks between Lukashenko and Putin have been growing for years. The Belarusian strongman has clashed with the Kremlin on a range of issues, including Moscow's bid to pull Minsk into a deeper political union. Ahead of the August election, Lukashenko had accused Moscow of trying to meddle in Belarusian affairs when his security forces arrested a group of Russian mercenarie­s.

Moscow denies ties with Belarus opposition

Lavrov's latest statement could be seen as a signal to Lukashenko that Moscow's patience is wearing thin. While some observers believe that Moscow is preparing to replace the longrunnin­g president with another pro-Russian politician, others warn that the reform could deepen and formalize Russia's control over its closest ally.

On Thursday, Lavrov denied contacts between Moscow and the opposition in Belarus. He also accused the West of "blatant meddling" in the country's internal affairs.

dj/jlw (Reuters, Interfax, AFP, dpa)

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