The Mercury News

Rights group reports scores are detained during protests

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Scores of people were detained in Belarus on Sunday during protests against the country’s authoritar­ian leader, who won his sixth term in office in a vote widely seen as rigged, a Belarusian rights group said.

Tens of thousands of protesters rallied in the Belarusian capital Minsk for the 10th consecutiv­e Sunday, demanding the resignatio­n of President Alexander Lukashenko, who has run the country with an iron fist for 26 years. The Viasna human rights center estimated that around 100,000 people took part in the protest, which the police moved to disperse with water cannons, stun grenades and truncheons.

Rallies also took place in other cities, including Brest, Vitebsk and Grodno.

Dozens of protesters sustained injuries, according to Viasna. The group released a list of protesters detained across the country on its website that by Sunday evening had more than 300 names on it.

“T his has been the harshest dispersal of a Sunday march since August,” Viasna leader Ales Bialiatski told The Associated Press.

Ma ss protests have rocked Belarus for over two months, with the largest ones held on Sundays and drawing up to 200,000 people. The unpreceden­ted unrest was triggered by the results of the Aug. 9 presidenti­al election that

handed Lukashenko a victory with 80% of the vote.

His main challenger, Sviatlana Tsikhanous­kaya, got 10%. She and her supporters refused to recognize the results, saying the outcome of the vote was manipulate­d.

In the first days of the protests, Belarusian authoritie­s cracked down brutally on protesters, with police detaining thousands and injuring scores with truncheons, rubber bullets and stun grenades. The violent response to the rallies prompted internatio­nal outrage.

The government has since scaled down on the violence but has maintained the pressure, detaining hundreds of protesters and prosecutin­g top activists. Prominent members of the opposition’s Coordinati­on Council, formed to push for a transition of power, have been arrested or forced to leave the country.

At least 35 journalist­s

have been detained during protests on Sunday, according to the Belarusian Associatio­n of Journalist­s. Police and other security forces blocked off central areas of Minsk, and military trucks and armored carriers were seen in the city before the rally.

On Saturday, Lukashenko visited a prison to talk to opposition activists, who have been jailed for challengin­g his reelection. Lukashenko’s office said that “the goal of the president was to hear everyone’s opinion.”

Commentato­rs said the move was an attempt to imitate a dialogue that would allow Lukashenko to drown the protests in talks and reduce tensions.

Following detentions and beatings during Sunday’s protest, Bialiatski of the Viasna center said that “instead of a dialogue, Belarusian­s received another strong-arm dispersal (of a protest) with the beaten and the injured.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Belarusian opposition supporters block a street during a rally to protest the official presidenti­al election results in Minsk, Belarus, on Sunday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Belarusian opposition supporters block a street during a rally to protest the official presidenti­al election results in Minsk, Belarus, on Sunday.

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