Las Vegas Review-Journal

Belarus leader armed amid protests

He steps off helicopter holding rifle near rally

- By Yuras Karmanau

MINSK, Belarus — The authoritar­ian president of Belarus made a dramatic show of defiance Sunday against the massive protests demanding his resignatio­n, toting a rifle and wearing a bulletproo­f vest as he strode off a helicopter that landed at his residence while demonstrat­ors massed nearby.

In the 15th day of the largest and most determined protests ever in independen­t Belarus, a crowd of about 200,000 rallied against President Alexander Lukashenko in a square in Minsk, the capital. They then marched to another rally and approached the Independen­ce Palace, the president’s working residence.

Video from the state news agency Belta showed a government helicopter landing on the grounds and Lukashenko getting off holding what appeared to be a Kalashniko­v-type automatic rifle. No ammunition clip was visible in the weapon, suggesting that Lukashenko, who cultivates an aura of machismo, aimed only to make a show of aggression.

Protests started Aug. 9 after a presidenti­al election that officials say handed the 65-year-old Lukashenko his sixth term in office with 80 percent voter approval. Opponents claim the results are fraudulent.

The size and duration of the protests have been unpreceden­ted for Belarus, a former Soviet republic of 9.5 million people that Lukashenko has ruled harshly for 26 years.

On Sunday afternoon, an opposition rally overflowed Minsk’s sprawling 17-acre Independen­ce Square. There were no official figures on crowd size, but it appeared to be about 200,000 people or more.

The demonstrat­ors then marched to another square about 1½ miles away and approached the edges of the presidenti­al residence grounds, where police in riot gear stood shoulder to shoulder, holding large shields.

The protesters dispersed in the evening amid rain.

There were no immediate reports of arrests. Earlier this month, some 7,000 people were arrested at protests, many of them badly beaten with clubs or wounded by rubber bullets, violence that only caused public outrage to swell.

Lukashenko appears to be flailing about for a strategy to counter the anti-government demonstrat­ions.

He has repeatedly blamed Western interferen­ce, claimed the protests were backed by the United States and accuses NATO of building up troop concentrat­ions in Poland and Lithuania on Belarus’ western border, which the alliance denies. He also claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was willing to offer security assistance to his government.

Lukashenko has consistent­ly repressed opposition during his time in office and weariness with his hardline rule, as well as dismay over the country’s deteriorat­ing economy and Lukashenko’s cavalier dismissal of the coronaviru­s pandemic, appear to have galvanized opponents.

 ?? Dmitri Lovetsky The Associated Press ?? Protesters unveil the historical flag of Belarus as thousands gather Sunday for a protest at a square in Minsk. Alexander Lukashenko, the nation’s president, arrived carrying a rifle and wearing a bulletproo­f vest in a show of force.
Dmitri Lovetsky The Associated Press Protesters unveil the historical flag of Belarus as thousands gather Sunday for a protest at a square in Minsk. Alexander Lukashenko, the nation’s president, arrived carrying a rifle and wearing a bulletproo­f vest in a show of force.

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