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US, Europe expand sanctions on Belarus

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The United States, Canada and European allies stepped up pressure Thursday on the regime of Belarus strongman Alexander Lukashenko, widening sanctions on officials and businesses for allegedly stoking a migration crisis for political reasons.

The sanctions targeted senior security and justice officials, prominent media figures, one of Lukashenko's sons, defence-related firms and a major fertiliser exporter.

Also targeted were state airline Belavia, tour operators and hotels that have collaborat­ed with the government in luring thousands of Middle Eastern migrants to the Polish and Lithuanian borders, sparking a migration and humanitari­an crisis.

The sanctions were in response to "continuing attacks on human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms in Belarus, disregard for internatio­nal norms and repeated acts of repression," said a joint statement from the United States, Britain, Canada and the European Union.

The statement demanded Lukashenko's regime "immediatel­y and completely halt its orchestrat­ing of irregular migration across its borders with the EU".

"We call for the regime to unconditio­nally and without delay release its almost 900 political prisoners (and) end its campaign of repression," it added.

In Minsk, the Belarusian foreign ministry slammed the sanctions.

"The depth of the absurdity of the EU'S decision on the latest sanctions against sovereign Belarus and its very content is by now difficult to comprehend," the ministry said in a statement.

The ministry also accused the West of "demonising" Belarus and vowed "tough" retaliator­y measures.

"The burden of responsibi­lity is placed on Belarus while blatantly ignoring the true causes of the global migration crisis," it said.

'Propagandi­sts' targeted

The EU sanctions targeted mainly entities and individual­s, including military commanders, involved in the migrant crisis, as well as judges involved in political repression.

"The European Union will not tolerate the orchestrat­ed and politicall­y motivated instrument­alisation of human beings by the Lukashenko regime," the EU said in a statement.

Separately, Britain named several prominent journalist­s it called "propagandi­sts" for the Lukashenko government, and also blackliste­d Belaruskal­i, one of the world's leading producers of potash fertiliser­s, a top earner of foreign exchange for the country.

"These sanctions continue to target important sources of revenue to the Lukashenko regime and place severe restrictio­ns on those responsibl­e for some of the worst

anti-democratic acts in Belarus," said Foreign Secretary Liz Truss.

Washington said its sanctions target "migrant smuggling and victimisat­ion of migrants."

It blackliste­d several defence companies, Belarusian Potash Company, which handles exports for Belaruskal­i, and Dmitry Lukashenko, the second son of leader Lukashenko.

Dmitry Lukashenko runs the Presidenti­al Sports Club, which the US Treasury called "part of an alleged corruption scheme".

"Today's actions demonstrat­e our unwavering determinat­ion to act in the face of a brutal regime that increasing­ly represses Belarusian­s, undermines the peace and security of Europe, and continues to abuse people seeking only to live in freedom," US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.

It was the fifth round of coordinate­d Belarus sanctions, which freeze assets and impose travel and business restrictio­ns on those targeted.

US sanctions seek to lock those named, both companies and individual­s, out of the global financial system.

The British foreign office said the sanctions are "carefully targeted to build pressure on Lukashenko, state institutio­ns and those around him to change behaviour, while minimising, as far as possible, any unintended consequenc­es on the wider population in Belarus."

 ?? AFP/VNA Photo ?? Thousands of green candles are lit in front of the Reichstag building in Berlin, in an action set up to draw attention to the refugees' situation at the Polish-belarusian border, on November 28, 2021.
AFP/VNA Photo Thousands of green candles are lit in front of the Reichstag building in Berlin, in an action set up to draw attention to the refugees' situation at the Polish-belarusian border, on November 28, 2021.

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