The Pak Banker

Belarusian protest leader ripped up passport

- MINSK -REUTERS

Prominent Belarusian opposition leader Maria Kolesnikov­a ripped up her passport to thwart an attempt to deport her to neighbouri­ng Ukraine, the Interfax Ukraine news agency reported on Tuesday.

Deputy Ukrainian Interior Minister Anton Gerashchen­ko said on Facebook that Kolesnikov­a, who had been missing for the past 24 hours, had successful­ly prevented "a forcible expulsion from her native country". The fate of Kolesnikov­a, a key figure in weeks of mass protests over the disputed reelection of Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, had been a mystery since supporters said she was snatched in the street by masked men in the capital Minsk on Monday.

"Maria Kolesnikov­a was not able to be deported from Belarus as this brave woman took steps to prevent her(self) from (being) moving across the border. She remained on the territory of the republic of Belarus. Alexander Lukashenko is personally responsibl­e for her life and health," Gerashchen­ko said. Interfax Ukraine quoted a source as saying that Kolesnikov­a had torn up her passport so that Ukrainian border officials would be unable to let her cross. Kolesnikov­a's current whereabout­s were unclear. Two other opposition figures who had gone missing around the same time as her did, however, enter Ukraine in the early hours of Tuesday morning, the Ukrainian border service said.

"Kolesnikov­a has now been detained, I can't say concretely where she is, but she has been detained," Anton Bychkovsky, a representa­tive of the Belarusian border service, told Reuters by phone. "She was detained in connection with the circumstan­ces under which they (the group) left the territory of Belarus," he said.

Several prominent opposition leaders have been arrested or forced to flee Belarus since last month's election after Lukashenko launched a crackdown by the security forces to maintain his 26-year grip on power in the former Soviet republic.

Kolesnikov­a, a member of the opposition coordinati­on council, was the last of three female politician­s left in Belarus who joined forces before the Aug. 9 election to try to challenge him.

A vocal critic of Lukashenko, she has played an important role in weeks of mass demonstrat­ions and strikes by protesters who accuse Lukashenko of rigging his reelection. Lukashenko, who enjoys Russia's support, denies that allegation and has accused foreign powers of trying to topple him in a revolution. He has responded with a crackdown which some those detained say includes torture and beatings. Kolesnikov­a, in an interview with Reuters last month, called on the West not to recognise him as president and said his rule was crumbling.

The Guangdong Coast Guard, which announced the arrests on its social media platform late on Aug. 26, said two of the detained were surnamed Li and Tang, without providing further details. It is not clear what charges they face, beyond potentiall­y illegal border crossing. Lam also reiterated a remark made last week which stoked further worries that Hong Kong had taken a more authoritar­ian turn, saying the city had no separation of powers, and that its executive, legislativ­e and judicial powers were derived from Beijing.

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