Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Belarus protesters violently dispersed

Early election results raise tensions

- YURAS KARMANAU Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jim Heintz and Vladimir Isachenkov of The Associated Press.

MINSK, Belarus — Phalanxes of Belarusian police in full riot gear violently dispersed thousands of demonstrat­ors who poured into the streets to challenge the early count from Sunday’s presidenti­al election, which indicated the longtime authoritar­ian leader won a sixth term by a landslide.

Hundreds of people were detained, according to a leading rights group.

The crackdown that began late Sunday and lasted through the night followed a tense campaign that saw large rallies against President Alexander Lukashenko, who has ruled the former Soviet nation with an iron hand for 26 years.

Election officials declared that early returns show the 65-year-old Lukashenko winning with more than 80% of the vote while the main challenger, Sviatlana Tsikhanous­kaya, a former English teacher and political novice, had about 8%.

Tsikhanous­kaya rejected the official claims, saying, “I will believe my own eyes — the majority was for us.”

Thousands of her supporters quickly took to the streets of the capital to protest what they saw as official manipulati­ons of the vote. They faced rows of riot police in black uniforms who moved quickly to disperse the demonstrat­ors, firing flash-bang grenades and beating them with truncheons.

After breaking up the big crowds, police chased smaller groups of protesters across downtown Minsk for the next several hours.

Several other cities across the country saw similar crackdowns on protesters.

Interior Ministry spokeswoma­n Olga Chemodanov­a said police efforts to restore order were continuing overnight, but she wouldn’t say how many people were detained.

Ales Bilyatsky of the Viasna human-rights group told The Associated Press that several hundred people were detained and hundreds were injured in the police crackdown.

“What has happened is awful,” Tsikhanous­kaya told reporters Sunday.

An AP journalist was beaten by police and treated at a hospital.

At Minsk’s Hospital No. 10, an AP reporter saw a dozen ambulances delivering protesters with fragmentat­ion wounds, cuts from stun grenades and other injuries.

“It was a peaceful protest; we weren’t using force,” said a 23-year-old protester, Pavel Konoplyani­k, who was accompanyi­ng a friend who had a plastic grenade fragment stuck in his neck. “No one will believe in the official results of the vote. They have stolen our victory.”

Konoplyani­k, whose legs were cut by fragments of police grenades, said he doesn’t want to leave the country but fears he might have no other choice.

Two prominent opposition challenger­s were denied places on the ballot, but Tsikhanous­kaya, the wife of a jailed opposition blogger, managed to unite opposition groups and draw tens of thousands to her campaign rallies, tapping growing anger over a stagnant economy and fatigue with Lukashenko’s autocratic rule.

Lukashenko was defiant as he voted earlier in the day, warning that the opposition will meet a tough response.

“If you provoke, you will get the same answer,” he said. “Do you want to try to overthrow the government, break something, wound, offend, and expect me or someone to kneel in front of you and kiss them and the sand onto which you wandered? This will not happen.”

 ?? (AP) ?? Protesters stay in a line Sunday during a protest after the Belarusian presidenti­al election in Minsk, Belarus. Belarus police and protesters clashed in the capital and the city of Brest on Sunday night after a presidenti­al election in which the country’s longtime leader sought a sixth term despite rising discontent with his authoritar­ian rule and his cavalier dismissal of the coronaviru­s pandemic.
(AP) Protesters stay in a line Sunday during a protest after the Belarusian presidenti­al election in Minsk, Belarus. Belarus police and protesters clashed in the capital and the city of Brest on Sunday night after a presidenti­al election in which the country’s longtime leader sought a sixth term despite rising discontent with his authoritar­ian rule and his cavalier dismissal of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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