Saturday 23 November 2024 | 04:33

The Washington Post: A chance to deal Belarus’s dictator a blow

20.05.2011  |  Publications

FOR YEARS, Western governments have chafed at the presence of a repressive dictatorship in the center of Europe — the former Soviet republic of Belarus, ruled with a mixture of brutality and megalomania by Alexander Lukashenko. Now a spectacular series of missteps by the strongman has put him in perhaps the tightest fix of his 17 years in power — and given the United States and its European allies an opportunity they should not fail to exploit.

Mr. Lukashenko’s troubles began last December when, after promising to hold a fair presidential election in exchange for a $3.6 billion Western aid package, he blatantly rigged the vote. When tens of thousands of Belarusans turned up in the center of Minsk to protest the fraud, he sent his police to attack them. Hundreds were arrested, including seven of the nine candidates who ran against him.

In recent weeks, a series of show trials have been staged against dozens of opposition leaders, including five of the presidential candidates. Twenty two have been given prison terms so far, including Andrei Sannikov, Mr. Lukashenko’s principal opponent, who was sentenced to five years in prison last Saturday. Claiming that he has crushed a Western-backed “fifth column,” Mr. Lukashenko has further justified the crackdown by citing a mysterious terrorist bombing in the Minsk subway system last month that killed 14 people and injured 200 — an attack that some in the opposition believe the regime itself may have orchestrated.

Oddly enough, Mr. Lukashenko himself spelled out his vulnerability in an interview with The Post’s Lally Weymouth in March. “The stupidity,” he said, “is that Belarus and Lukashenko do not have the resources to be a dictator.” In fact, having promised huge pay increases to state employees before the election, the regime is now watching the economy implode because of Belarus’s inability to obtain foreign financing. The value of the currency has plunged by 50 percent in the past week; hundreds of businesses are closing; and shortages are spreading.

Russia, which usually bails Belarus out, is playing hardball. It has withheld a loan package and even condemned the political trials. This is not because Moscow has discovered human rights; rather, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who has long despised Mr. Lukashenko, is trying to force him to sell off large state companies to Russian investors and cede Belarus’s political independence to the Kremlin.

Mr. Lukashenko has tried to resist Mr. Putin in the past by playing him off against the West. But Western governments should no longer succumb to that tactic. The United States and the European Union have already imposed sanctions on more than 170 Belarusan officials since the post-election violence, and they should respond to the trial verdicts with still tougher measures. In particular, European foreign ministers should move at their meeting on Monday to penalize the big state companies — including the oil, potash and arms export firms — on which the dictatorship rests. They should let Mr. Putin know that swallowing Belarus and its assets will prejudice Russia’s own proposals for a strategic partnership with the European Union.

For its part, the Obama administration should make Belarus a test of the “reset” of relations with Russia. Moscow and Washington ought to be able to agree on a common message to Mr. Lukashenko: free the political prisoners and accept genuine political and economic reforms, or face bankruptcy and isolation.

 

The Washington Post

Other news section «Publications»

Uladzimir Matskevich: There is a lot of demagoguery and lies in Belarusan politics
All the arguments of opposition politicians for taking part in the elections resemble are rather self-justifications and attempts to find some space for themselves in this difficult political situation, believes the head of the Board of the...
Miachyslau Gryb: I see no crime in German police's contacts with Belarus
 «I don’t see any crime in the attempt of Belarusan police to learn something from German police. Everyone - from the highest ranks to the lowest ones - simply has to observe the law». Miachyslau Gryb, former Speaker of the Supreme Council of Belarus,...
Human rights defender Ales Bialiatski has been nominated for the Sakharov Prize
Belarusan human rights defender Ales Bialiatski has been nominated for the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought. 
Eastern Partnership Journalism Prize 2012
We invite you to participate in a second edition of a unique and extraordinary contest for reporters, The Eastern Partnership Journalism Prize. If you are a journalist from one of the countries of Eastern Partnership (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,...
Stanislau BahdankieviДЌ:The president has already taught Belarusan women to bear children correctly
Belarus is on the way to reaching a deadlock in all the directions, while the modernization of the country should be started with political reforms. And the first thing to do is to reject the authoritarian system of government in order to make it...
Consultation on "Towards a Post-2015 Development Framework"
Policy field Global governance, International Cooperation, Development Target groups International Organisations, Government bodies, Academic institutions, Civil Society Organisations, Private Sector Organisations, Foundations, individuals.   Period of...
Connected by the border - network building
Trans Cultura Foundation (Poland) together with Workshops of Culture (Poland) and partners: Suburb Cultural Centre (Armenia), United Artits’ Club (Azerbaijan), Lohvinau Publishing House (Belarus), GeoAIR (Georgia), Young Artists Asociation «Oberliht»...
Andrei Yahorau: The election campaign will be boring
The number of registered candidates representing opposition parties is on the average not much higher than that during previous parliamentary elections. Such an opinion was expressed to the Information Service of «EuroBelarus» by political scientist...
First semi-annual BISS-Trends issued
The first half of 2012 saw the main trend in the political democratization and liberalization segment carry on from the year 2011, as stagnation continued. There were new manifestations of administrative and criminal prosecution of democratic...
Partner search in Estonia, Latvia, Poland, Belarus, Ukraine and Russia
Basta is a social enterprise outside Stockholm. It began in 1994 helping people move away from drugs and criminality through qualified work, housing, and a meaningful spare time. Basta is a client-run social enterprise - in theory as well as in...
Tatiana Vadalazhskaya: The modern education system should focus on the universe of knowledge
In early September, a presentation of the Flying University program for the new school year will be held. As recently experts have repeatedly talked about the problems of the Belarusian higher education, expanding the Flying University program requires...
European Congress "Europe: Crisis and Renewal" (5-8 April 2013, Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, UK)
The processes of political, economic, and cultural change in Europe have had a particularly strong impact upon the countries of Eastern Europe and their neighbours in the east. It is timely to reflect on and debate the ways in which Europe and the...
Uladzimir Matskevich: The Pussy Riot sentence demonstrates the absence of secular society in Russia
The sentence on the Pussy Riot band members demonstrates nonobservance of constitutional norm of secularism of the Russian state, supposes Uladzimir Matskevich, the head of the Board of the International Consortium «EuroBelarus
A.Yahorau: Due to the tenure of power, too few people can serve as ministers
Next serial staff changes have been taking place in higher levels of the Belarusian government: Piotr Prokopovich [former Chairman of the Board of the National Bank of Belarus – EuroBelarus] was appointed as assistant to the President, and the...
U.Vialichka: I don’t think that Mackey’s appointment will fundamentally influence Belarusian policy
The chairman of the International Consortium "EuroBelarus" Ulad Vialichka hopes that a diplomatic conflict with Sweden may calm down in a few months. However, it is very difficult, in his view, to accurately predict the development of bilateral...
Alexander Klaskousky:The authorities’ decision on people banned from travelling abroad was impulsive
The situation around the Belarusian authorities’ decision on the list of persons banned from travelling abroad looks not quite understood. On the one hand, a number of civil society activists and opposition politicians - Valiantsin Stefanovich, Andrei...
Irina Sukhiy: Even if the nuclear power station is built it can always be closed down
After Belarusian and Russian governments have signed the contract for construction of the nuclear power plant (NPP) in the Astravets district, and the cornerstone was laid on the site, the mission of anti-nuclear ecologists is not over. In contrast, it...
E.Lipkovich: I suspect bloggers've been taught "multi-vectorness and a blue-eyed character"
Youth internet forum "I am the leader!" organized by the Belarusian Republican Youth Union (BRSM) in the framework of the preparation for the election to the parliament took place in Minsk on August 16. The Forum organizers have gathered about 200...
U.Matskevich: Weaklings will be frozen to death and strong people will be tempered.
Some participants of the current election campaign voice so many platitudes that induce the head of the Board of the International Consortium "EuroBelarus" Uladzimir Matskevich to speak directly and categorically, "Your experience, gentlemen, is scanty...
Russia-Eurasia - Robert Bosch Fellowship at Chatham House
Chatham House, in partnership with the Robert Bosch Stiftung, invites scholars from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Russia and Ukraine to apply for a Visiting Fellowship at Chatham House in London.
Gintautas Mažeikis: The relation of political field and arena in the framework of information war

In his report, philosopher Gintautas Mažeikis discusses several concepts that have been a part of the European social and philosophical thought for quite a time.

“It is our big joint work”

It is impossible to change life in cities just in three years (the timeline of the “Agenda 50” campaign implementation). But changing the structure of relationships in local communities is possible.

Shhh! Belarus Wants You to Think It’s Turning Over a New Leaf

Minsk’s muddled media clampdown could jeopardize warming of relations with the West.

Mikhail Matskevich: How to create a local agenda and make it a problem solving tool

To achieve changes, you need to be interested in them and stop pinning all hopes on the state.