The Jerusalem Post

Belarus allows police to use combat weapons

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MOSCOW ( Reuters) - Belarus police will now be permitted to use combat weapons in the streets if needed, the Interior Ministry said on Monday, as security forces again clashed with protesters who want President Alexander Lukashenko to quit after a contested Aug. 9 election.

“Fascists,” the protesters chanted in a tense standoff with security forces personnel wearing balaclavas who responded with flare guns and an unidentifi­ed spray, according to video clips circulatin­g on social media.

The sound of a blast could be heard as plumes of gray smoke filled the air at the scene. There were no immediate reports of injuries or arrests.

A spokesman for the Interior Ministry later confirmed that police had used flare guns and tear gas to disperse an unauthoriz­ed rally.

“The protests, which have shifted largely to Minsk, have become organized and extremely radical,” the Interior Ministry said in a statement.

“In this regard, the Interior Ministry’s employees and internal troops will not leave the streets and, if necessary, will use special equipment and military weapons,” it said.

Tens of thousands of Belarusian­s have demonstrat­ed every weekend since the election, in which Lukashenko was declared the winner. His opponents say the vote was rigged, a charge denied by Lukashenko, who has been in power for 26 years and has now turned to Russia for financial and other support to keep power.

Monday’s clashes occurred after thousands of people took part in a “march of pensioners” in the capital Minsk. The protesters chanted “Go away” and waved white flags with a red stripe, a symbol of the Belarusian opposition.

On Sunday, when 713 people were detained for taking part in mass protests, security forces used water cannon and batons to break up crowds demanding a new presidenti­al election.

European Union foreign ministers agreed on Monday to sanction Lukashenko and other senior officials over what they said was a rigged election and worsening police violence against protesters.

Lukashenko was not on an earlier EU sanctions list agreed on Oct. 2 that targeted 40 names, but the bloc now says his refusal to consider new elections as a way out of the crisis leaves it with no choice.

 ?? ( Reuters) ?? A PROTESTER holds up a poster in front of a law enforcemen­t officer with pictures of injured people during a rally against police brutality in the Belarus capital, Minsk, Belarus last month.
( Reuters) A PROTESTER holds up a poster in front of a law enforcemen­t officer with pictures of injured people during a rally against police brutality in the Belarus capital, Minsk, Belarus last month.

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