Toronto Star

Protests over Belarus election surge

Thousands rally in Minsk as authoritie­s release detainees to stem anger

- YURAS KARMANAU THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINSK, BELARUS— Tens of thousands of people flooded the heart of the Belarus capital of Minsk on Friday in a show of anger over a brutal police crackdown this week on peaceful protesters that followed a disputed election, and authoritie­s sought to ease rising public fury by freeing at least 2,000 who were jailed after earlier demonstrat­ions. Factory workers marched across the city shouting “Go away!” in a call for authoritar­ian President Alexander Lukashenko to resign after 26 years of iron-fisted rule that was extended in an election Sunday that protesters denounced as rigged. Friday’s crowds grew to more than 20,000, filling central Independen­ce Square.

About a dozen soldiers guarding the nearby government headquarte­rs lowered their riot shields in what the demonstrat­ors saw as a sign of solidarity, and women rushed to embrace and kiss the guards.

As the protesters rallied on the square, Lukashenko dismissed them as puppets manipulate­d from abroad. During a meeting with law enforcemen­t officials, he defended the crackdown as a justified response to violence against police by some of the protesters. The Interior Ministry said121pol­ice officers were injured. He told officials, however, to avoid excessive force.

“If a person falls down and lies still, don’t beat him!” Lukashenko said. He cautioned people against turning out for protests, saying the country is facing foreign “aggression.”

“Don’t get out into the streets.

You should understand that you and your children are being used as cannon fodder,” Lukashenko said, alleging that people from Poland, the Netherland­s, Ukraine and some members of Russia’s opposition were fomenting the unrest.

“Do you want me to sit and wait until they turn Minsk upside down?” he said. “We won’t be able to stabilize the situation afterwards. We must take a break, collect ourselves and calm down. And let us restore order and deal with those who have come here.”

Earlier, police didn’t interfere as the protesters marched across the city, reflecting Lukashenko’s apparent attempt to assuage the opposition by stepping back from the violent police crackdowns seen across the country earlier this week.

The release by the Interior Ministry of about 2,000 of the nearly 7,000 people detained was seen as another move to defuse popular outrage. It said more would be freed. Many who were released spoke of brutal beatings and other abuse by police, and some showed bruises on their bodies. Some of them wept as they embraced waiting relatives.

“The authoritie­s are obviously trying to de-escalate the situation and ease the tensions, fearing that the furious industrial workers will take to the streets all across Belarus,” said Valiantsin Stefanovic­h of the Viasna rights centre.

Demonstrat­ors have swarmed the streets ever since Sunday’s election in which officials reported that Lukashenko won 80 per cent of the vote to win a sixth term in office.

His main challenger, Sviatlana Tsikhanous­kaya, who fled on Tuesday to neighbouri­ng Lithuania, posted a new video in which she disputed the results of the vote and demanded that the government start a dialogue with demonstrat­ors.

The ferocious crackdown has left hundreds injured since Sunday as police have dispersed the largely peaceful demonstrat­ions with stun grenades, tear gas, rubber bullets and severe beatings. At least one person has been killed.

The brutal suppressio­n of protests drew harsh criticism in the West. European Union foreign ministers said they rejected the election results and tasked officials with drawing up a list of people in Belarus who could face sanctions over their role in the crackdown.

“Work begins on sanctionin­g those responsibl­e for violence and falsificat­ion,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell tweeted. Earlier, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said the EU wants to “significan­tly increase the pressure on Belarus.”

 ?? SERGEI GRITS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman holding an old Belarusian flag marches Friday in Minsk, where more than 20,000 people filled the city’s central square.
SERGEI GRITS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman holding an old Belarusian flag marches Friday in Minsk, where more than 20,000 people filled the city’s central square.

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