BELARUS NEWS AND ANALYSIS

DATE:

20/03/2006

Belarus Election Dismissed As a 'Farce'

By MARIA DANILOVA, 4 minutes ago

MINSK, Belarus - Independent observers said Monday the re-election of iron-fisted President Alexander Lukashenko was "a farce" because his opponents were systematically intimidated and detained.

The United States called for new elections in Belarus, with the White House and European Union also hinting at sanctions against Lukashenko's authoritarian government.

However, Russian President Vladimir Putin congratulated Lukashenko and said the outcome would strengthen their alliance. He said in a telegram to Lukashenko that the vote "highlighted voters' trust in your course aimed at strengthening welfare of the Belarusian people," according to the Kremlin.

Official results showed Lukashenko with 82.6 percent of the vote, Central Election Commission chief Lidiya Yermoshina said. Main opposition candidate Alexander Milinkevich received 6 percent, she said, citing a complete preliminary ballot count.

But busloads of riot police in helmets and camouflage uniforms streamed into the area where the opposition rally was planned. The security forces moved into neighborhood courtyards and prevented pedestrians from walking toward the capital's Oktyabrskaya Square.

At a boastful and belligerent nationally televised news conference where he repeatedly criticized the United States, Lukashenko repeated allegations that the opposition was backed by Western forces plotting to bring him down.

"You have seen our opposition, and if you are reasonable people you have been convinced that it's worthless," said the 51-year-old leader who has ruled since 1994.

Monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the Council of Europe said the election was neither free nor fair.

The European Union said the elections were marred by intimidation, and the 25-nation bloc likely will impose financial and diplomatic sanctions on Belarus' top political leaders. McClellan also said penalties such as travel restrictions "are things we will look at."

"In a country in which freedom of expression and association are so thoroughly and aggressively suppressed, a vote is not an exercise in democracy, it is a farce," said Terry Davis, president of the Council of Europe, the continent's premier human rights organization.

Milinkevich called the official vote tally for Lukashenko "monstrously inflated" and denounced the leader as an "illegal, illegitimate president."

"In Belarus, we did not have an election but an unconstitutional seizure of power," he said, repeating his demand for a revote "in which he law of the country is followed."

The Soviet past is strongly palpable in Belarus. The government makes five-year plans, the main state newspaper has "Soviet" in its title and the state security service is still officially called the KGB. Russia, which has an agreement with Belarus envisaging close political, economic and military ties, has staunchly backed Lukashenko, who has become a pariah in the West for his relentless crackdown on opposition and independent media.

Western countries have forged close ties with the opposition and made no secret of their contempt for the ruler of what Washington calls an outpost of tyranny in Europe.

After polls closed Sunday, thousands of opposition supporters jammed Oktyabrskaya Square, shouting, "Freedom!" and "Long live Belarus!" in scenes reminiscent of protests that brought opposition leaders to power in other former republics.

Demonstrators waved a national flag that Lukashenko scrapped in favor of a Soviet-style replacement, as well as European Union flags.

People blew horns and chanted "Mi-lin-ke-vich!" - echoing the much larger crowds on Kiev's Independence Square in Ukraine's 2004 Orange Revolution, which turned the nation toward the West.

The use or threat of force neutralized opposition efforts to protest vote results in Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan last year, and a bloody government crackdown in Uzbekistan left hundreds dead.

The authorities made no move to disperse Sunday's protesters, but busloads of riot police idling on a nearby street were a reminder of the government's threats of a decisive response.

Lukashenko said the protest leaders were in the pay of Western ambassadors and said there was no crackdown because the opposition is weak.

"Who was there to fight with? Nobody, understand? That's why we gave them the opportunity to show themselves, even though it was illegal," he said.

The crowd was the biggest the opposition had mustered in years, reaching at least 10,000, according to reporters' estimates. After about three hours, a smaller group marched to nearby Victory Square, some laying carnations at a monument before dispersing around midnight.

Milinkevich's campaign chief, Sergei Kalyakin, said Sunday's protest was not big enough, and that crowds 10 times larger were needed to force the authorities "to hear the voice of the people."

While Lukashenko is a dictator to his opponents and foreign critics, many Belarusians see the former collective farm manager as having brought stability after the uncertainty that followed the 1991 Soviet collapse. While the landlocked nation, about as big and flat as Kansas, is far from prosperous, the economy is growing and salaries are rising.

Critics say the economic successes are unsustainable, based largely on cheap Russian energy and heavy-handed state intervention reminiscent of the communist era.

Source:

http://www.heraldnewsdaily.com/stories/news-00161494.html

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