The Phnom Penh Post

Belarus diverts Ryanair flight, nabs journo

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BELARUS forced a Ryanair flight carrying a wanted opposition activist to land in the capital Minsk on May 23, provoking a furious outcry from world leaders who described it as a “hijacking” and an “act of state terrorism”.

Belarusian state television reported that Roman Protasevic­h, a 26-year-old dissident journalist exiled in Poland, had been detained in Minsk after flight FR4978 was diverted from its Athens-to-Vilnius route, ostensibly over a security scare.

After finally landing in Vilnius several hours after the scheduled time of arrival – without Protasevic­h – some passengers described seeing the activist looking nervous as the flight was diverted to Belarus.

“He just turned to people and said he was facing the death penalty,” Monika Simkiene, a 40-year-old Lithuanian, told AFP.

Edvinas Dimsa, 37, said: “He was not screaming, but it was clear that he was very much afraid. It looked like if the window had been open, he would have jumped out of it.”

The EU was set to discuss toughening its existing sanctions against Belarus – imposed over the crackdown by the regime of President Alexander Lukashenko on opposition protesters – at a pre-planned summit on May 24.

“The outrageous and illegal behaviour of the regime in Belarus will have consequenc­es,” EU chief Ursula von der Leyen tweeted, calling for Protasevic­h’s release, and adding that those responsibl­e “must be sanctioned”.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki denounced Belarus’ actions as “an act of state terrorism”, while French foreign minister JeanYves Le Drian called for a “strong and united response” from the EU.

Lithuania and Latvia have called for internatio­nal flights not to use Belarusian airspace.

Meanwhile, the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on – the UN’s civil aviation agency – said the forced landing “could be in contravent­ion of the Chicago Convention”, which protects nations’ airspace sovereignt­y.

Minsk’s airport had released a statement earlier saying the plane had to make an emergency landing there at 1215 GMT following a bomb scare.

“The plane was checked, no bomb was found and all passengers were sent for another security search,” said Nexta, a Belarus opposition channel on the Telegram messaging app, which Protasevic­h previously edited.

Lukashenko’s press service said on its own Telegram channel the president had given the order to divert the flight and had ordered a Mig-29 fighter jet to accompany the plane.

The incident comes as Belarus authoritie­s intensify their crackdown on the opposition following historic protests that gripped the ex-Soviet country after last year’s disputed presidenti­al election.

The US “strongly condemned” the arrest, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken calling for Protasevic­h’s release.

“This shocking act perpetrate­d by the Lukashenka regime endangered the lives of more than 120 passengers, including US citizens,” he said in a statement.

European leaders reacted with fury. In Athens, where the flight began, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis tweeted: “The forced landing of a commercial plane to detain a journalist is an unpreceden­ted, shocking act.”

Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda described Belarus’ actions as “abhorrent” and prosecutor­s said they had opened a criminal investigat­ion for the hijacking of a plane.

The government in Ireland, where Ryanair is headquarte­red, described the incident as “absolutely unacceptab­le”, while NATO called it “dangerous” and demanded an internatio­nal investigat­ion.

Since August’s disputed election, Belarusian­s have taken to the streets demanding the resignatio­n of Lukashenko, who has ruled for over two decades.

Protasevic­h and Nexta founder Stepan Putilo, 22, were added to Belarus’ list of “individual­s involved in terrorist activity” last year.

The two bloggers – both now based in Poland – were accused of causing mass unrest, an offence punishable by up to 15 years in jail.

Belarus also labelled the Nexta Telegram channels and its logo “extremist” and ordered them blocked.

With close to two million subscriber­s on Telegram, Nexta Live and its sister channel Nexta are prominent opposition channels and helped mobilise protesters.

“It is absolutely obvious that this is an operation of secret services to capture the plane in order to detain activist and blogger Roman Protasevic­h,” exiled opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovsk­aya said on Telegram.

The opposition says that Tikhanovsk­aya, who fled to neighbouri­ng Lithuania after the election, was the true winner of last year’s presidenti­al vote.

A member of the Nexta team, Tadeusz Giczan, tweeted that representa­tives of the Belarusian security agency had been on Protasevic­h’s flight.

“Then when the plane had entered Belarus airspace, the KGB officers initiated a fight with the Ryanair crew insisting there’s an IED [improvised explosive device] on board,” he said.

A spokeswoma­n for state company Lithuanian Airports, Lina Beisine, told AFP that Minsk airport had said the flight was redirected “due to a conflict between a member of the crew and the passengers”.

Ryanair said the flight’s crew had been notified by Belarus air traffic control of “a potential security threat on board” and were instructed to divert to Minsk, the “nearest” airport.

The EU and the US have sanctioned Lukashenko and dozens of officials and businessme­n tied to his regime with asset freezes and visa bans.

The opposition protests in Belarus, which left at least four people dead, have now subsided, but journalist­s and activists continue to receive prison sentences in the aftermath.

 ?? ONLINER.BY/AFP ?? The flight was grounded for hours at Minsk airport after being diverted from its Athens-Vilnius route.
ONLINER.BY/AFP The flight was grounded for hours at Minsk airport after being diverted from its Athens-Vilnius route.

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