Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

The Belarusian opposition is growing stronger

- By Slawomir Sierakowsk­i Slawomir Sierakowsk­i, founder of the Krytyka Polityczna movement, is a senior fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations. © Project Syndicate, 2022.

As the war in Ukraine rages on, the stability of neighborin­g Belarus, which has been backing the Russian invasion, appears to be fracturing. Has Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war of aggression opened a Pandora’s box for a regime that is practicall­y a remote wing of the Kremlin?

Recall that in Belarus’s last presidenti­al election, in August 2020, Svetlana Tikhanovsk­aya almost certainly defeated the incumbent, Aleksandr Lukashenko, whose minions had dismissed his opponent as a “housewife.”

When an upswell of support made it obvious that Tikhanovsk­aya was heading for victory, Lukashenko falsified the results, awarding himself over 80% of the vote – and inciting huge protests that lasted for months.

Lukashenko’s regime responded to the post-election demonstrat­ions with terror and mass arrests, which led to even larger protests. Within days of the election, his grip had begun to weaken, with workers, public media, doctors, students, pensioners, and many others coming out publicly against the security services.

The entire country went on strike, but Lukashenko, in power since 1994, held on by the skin of his teeth, owing to brutal interventi­ons by loyal special forces, who were already drenched in innocent blood and therefore completely dependent on him.

Ultimately, Lukashenko chose not to test the army’s loyalty.

Nonetheles­s, it has since been clear that Belarusian­s will not return to the passivity that they exhibited before August 2020.

“We have all changed, and forever,” says the opposition leader Masha Kalesnikov­a, who has not lost faith despite having been in prison for the past 23 months.

Because Lukashenko’s regime had offered hardly any state assistance or media coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic in the months before the election, Belarusian­s had already switched en masse to independen­t media, which they still read and watch today, despite the threat of imprisonme­nt.

Like Ukraine, Belarus is culturally alien to Russia. That is why Belarusian­s were able to stun the world with their sustained protests and demands for democracy in 2020, despite Belarusian society having been subjected to Sovietizat­ion and centuries of Russificat­ion.

Belarusian­s acted as if they lived in a modern, democratic, liberal society, because that is what many Belarusian­s consider themselves to be (though older cohorts are still heavily influenced by Russia and Lukashenko himself).

To keep this broad-based opposition movement at bay, Lukashenko must rely on constant draconian repression. More than 1,000 political prisoners have been given decadeplus prison sentences, and 1,500 others have been jailed for protesting against the war in Ukraine, including by sabotaging railroads to impede the Russian army. Others have received on-the-spot unofficial punishment­s such as rifle shots to the knee.

For example, as she was led from a courtroom recently, the 28-year-old Belsat reporter Kaciaryna Andreyeva remarked to her husband, “I got a longer sentence than Solzhenits­yn.” Whereas the famous Russian dissident was sentenced to eight years by the Soviets, Andreyeva was sentenced to eight years and three months.

Comparing Belarusian­s to Ukrainians and expecting the same type of resistance is unfair. Belarusian­s do not have opposition members in parliament or in local government­s like Ukrainians had before the invasion.

Poles also protested peacefully against the imposition of martial law in December 1981, because it was the only way they could make their voices heard. And while the tenmillion-strong Solidarity trade union was diminished after 16 months of operation, the myth survived. A million people may have left Poland, but the rest stayed and did not forget how to take to the streets.

Russia’s failing war in Ukraine could soon offer a similar opportunit­y to Belarus. Since 2020, Belarusian society has articulate­d its values, learned the art of long-term resistance, and created a free media based abroad.

And now, for perhaps the first time ever, Belarusian dissidents are getting their hands on weapons and joining the fight against Putin in Ukraine, where they are becoming renowned for their courage and battlefiel­d successes.

On the second anniversar­y of the protests, all political forces came to an agreement and a Belarusian government­in-exile was formed, headed by Tikhanovsk­aya. It includes her office operating in Vilnius; the National Anti-Crisis Management, headed by Pavel Latushka; the Warsaw-based BYPOL initiative of former members of the uniformed services; the Opposition Initiative, which includes the Cyber Partisans; and the Pahonia regiment fighting in Ukraine.

The Coordinati­on Council, created during the protests two years ago and featuring Nobel Prize winner Svetlana Alexeyevic­h, is being transforme­d into a substitute for parliament.

A marked change is that the government-in-exile already has its own armed branch, for which more than 200,000 Belarusian­s have registered, ready to rise up against Lukashenko at the first opportunit­y – including by force.

Until recently, Belarusian soldiers and government officials had no alternativ­es. But now they have a choice between the illegitima­te government in Minsk and the legitimate one elected by a majority vote in 2020, headed by Tikhanovsk­aya. That choice will be made when the opportunit­y arises, which could be when Russia’s humiliatio­n in Ukraine engulfs the Kremlin in chaos.

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