Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Belarus protesters gather in Minsk districts, hundreds arrested

At least 300 people were detained as thousands of opposition protesters staged a series of smaller rallies in Minsk suburbs. Demonstrat­ors had tried a new approach to try to evade a crackdown by authoritie­s.

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Belarusian authoritie­s have arrested more than 300 people taking part in anti-government protests in Minsk and other cities.

Massive demonstrat­ions against President Alexander Lukashenko have rocked Belarus since August, when the strongman leader claimed victory in widely disputed polls.

For weeks, security forces have sought to quash the opposition movement by detaining protesters and preventing them from gathering in central Minsk, where the biggest rallies — sometimes attracting hundreds of thousands of people — have taken place.

On Sunday, the opposition appealed to its supporters to instead attend smaller gatherings in different districts of the capital.

Local media reported that at least 20 protests took place in Minsk. In some areas, separate rallies merged to form columns of several hundred people.

Heavy security

Riot police were deployed to break up the protests and, as in previous weeks, authoritie­s shut metro stations and blocked mobile phone coverage in an attempt to stop people from meeting. There were also reports of power cuts in some neighborho­ods.

"Large columns of people have assembled in all districts of Minsk, without exception. The Lukashenko police are desperatel­y rushing from district to district," said opposition Telegram channel Nexta Live, which has been coordinati­ng the demonstrat­ions.

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Belarusian news website Tut.by reported that police were using stun grenades and tear gas, while videos of masked officers dragging protesters into vans circulated on social media.

Human rights group Viasna said that more than 300 people had been taken into custody, most of them in Minsk.

'Proud, brave and peaceful'

Western government­s have condemned the recent elections as neither free nor fair. Earlier this month, the EU approved new sanctions on Belarusian officials, including Lukashenko, over poll irregulari­ties and the crackdown on protesters.

Belarus' opposition has alleged the election was rigged and that Lukashenko's main challenger, Sviatlana Tsikhanous­kaya, who is in exile in Lithuania, was the true winner.

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"Everyone takes to the streets in their district and sees dozens, hundreds and thousands of supporters," Tikhanovsk­aya said in a message to her Telegram channel ahead of Sunday's protests.

Belarusian­s are a "proud, brave and peaceful people that have learned the price of freedom and will never agree to live without it," she added.

Lukashenko, an ally of Russia, has refused to resign and has instead offered to reform the constituti­on.

nm/mm (AFP, dpa, Interfax)

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 ??  ?? Opposition supporters holding former white-red-white flags of Belarus
Opposition supporters holding former white-red-white flags of Belarus

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