Bangkok Post

Belarus votes to host key ally

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MOSCOW: Belarusian­s voted yesterday to allow the country to host nuclear weapons and Russian forces permanentl­y, results showed, part of a package of constituti­onal reforms that also extended the rule of leader Alexander Lukashenko.

The referendum was held on Sunday as the ex-Soviet country’s neighbour Ukraine is under attack from Russian troops and delegation­s from Moscow and Kyiv are expected to meet for talks on the Belarusian border.

Central Election Commission head Igor Karpenko said 65.1% of referendum participan­ts voted in favour of the amendments and 10.1% voted against, Russian news agencies reported. According to Mr Karpenko, voter turnout stood at 78.6%.

To come into force, the amendments need to receive at least 50% of the vote with a turnout of over half the electorate.

Mr Lukashenko, who has been in power since 1994, promised the referendum in the wake of historic protests against his disputed re-election in 2020.

By amending the constituti­on Mr Lukashenko, 67, follows in the footsteps of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who in 2020 oversaw a vote on constituti­onal changes that made it possible for him to remain in power until 2036.

The constituti­onal changes also grant immunity to former leaders for crimes committed during their term in office.

Russia is a key ally of Belarus and last week Mr Lukashenko allowed Russian troops to use Belarusian territory to invade Ukraine from the north.

Belarus inherited a number of Soviet nuclear warheads following the breakup of the USSR in 1991, according to the Nuclear Threat Initiative think tank, which it then transferre­d to Russia.

Mr Lukashenko first floated possible changes after a presidenti­al vote in August 2020 sparked unpreceden­ted demonstrat­ions that were met with a brutal crackdown. He claimed a sixth term in the vote and imprisoned leading opposition figures, while his main rival Svetlana Tikhanovsk­aya was forced to seek refuge in neighbouri­ng Lithuania.

The amendments would reinstate presidenti­al term limits — previously ditched by Mr Lukashenko — to two five-year terms, but they would only apply to the next elected president.

Were Mr Lukashenko to put himself forward as a candidate for re-election in 2025, he could remain in power for an additional ten years. Ms Tikhanovsk­aya’s office in Lithuania hit out at the vote, saying a crackdown on any dissenting voices since the 2020 election made any real discussion of the proposals impossible.

 ?? AFP ?? Belarus’ President Alexander Lukashenko casts his ballot in the referendum on the charter amendments at a polling station in Minsk on Sunday.
AFP Belarus’ President Alexander Lukashenko casts his ballot in the referendum on the charter amendments at a polling station in Minsk on Sunday.

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