Antelope Valley Press

Belarus president plans to leave job if new constituti­on is adopted

- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KYIV, Ukraine — The president of Belarus said Friday that he would not remain in the post he has held for more than 26 years if his country adopts a new constituti­on.

However, President Alexander Lukashenko did not describe the amendments he is seeking or give a timeline for when a new constituti­on might be adopted.

Lukashenko has repeatedly raised the prospect of a new constituti­on since the Aug. 9 presidenti­al election in which he won a sixth term produced protests demanding his resignatio­n. The Belarusian political opposition and some poll workers have alleged the election was rigged.

The opposition views the talk of constituti­onal revisions as a delaying tactic aimed at sapping the momentum of the near-daily protests, which have occurred throughout the country and attracted crowds sometimes numbering more than 100,000.

Belarusian authoritie­s have called for a national assembly of thousands of people in late December or January to discuss proposed constituti­onal changes.

“I will not work with you as president under the new constituti­on,” Lukashenko said in comments released by his press service.

The remarks came a day after Lukashenko met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who expressed support for a new Belarusian Constituti­on. Russia has close ties with Belarus, and Moscow has offered Lukashenko security assistance if he requests it.

Lukashenko, who has been in office since 1994, has refused to negotiate with the opposition on a trasnfer of power or a new presidenti­al election.

Police have taken a hard line against the demonstrat­ions, and human rights activists say more than 19,000 people have been detained and thousands of them beaten.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenk ( center) listens to medics Friday as he visits a transfusio­logy center in Minsk, Belarus.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenk ( center) listens to medics Friday as he visits a transfusio­logy center in Minsk, Belarus.

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