Belarus’ Lukashenko says he’s ready to partially relinquish power

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Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said during a speech in Minsk on Monday that he was prepared to relinquish some of his authority through constitutional change.

In an attempt to defuse the protest movement that has erupted amid last week’s widely disputed presidential election, Lukashenko said the change would come “not under pressure and not through the streets,” according to an official transcript.

Lukashenko abruptly ended the speech, at the MZKT truck factory, as a crowd of striking workers chanted “Get out,” according to a video of the scene.

That slogan, a call for Lukashenko to resign, has become a rallying cry for protesters throughout the country since the August 9 election that officials say gave Lukashenko a sixth consecutive term.

His speech drowned out by the chant, Lukashenko said before leaving the podium: “Thank you, I’ve said everything. Now you can yell, ‘Get out.'”

Protesters allege that authorities rigged the results of last week’s election to give Lukashenko a landslide victory with more than 80 per cent of votes.

Lukashenko, 65, has led the former Soviet republic in Eastern Europe, between Russia and EU member state Poland, for a quarter century, tolerating little dissent. Police have responded to the recent protests with a violent crackdown.

Rejecting calls for a revote, Lukashenko said in Monday’s speech that “no one should ever expect to pressure me into doing something,” according to an official transcript.

A leading independent news source in Belarus, Tut.by, quoted Lukashenko as saying at the event: “Unless you kill me, there will not be a revote.”

The European Union has condemned the election as “neither free nor fair.”

Last week EU foreign affairs ministers agreed to begin preparing sanctions against Belarusian officials responsible for police violence and election fraud.

The head of the European Council scheduled an emergency leaders summit on Wednesday to discuss the crisis.

“The people of Belarus have the right to decide on their future and freely elect their leader,” European Council President Charles Michel said in a statement on Twitter. “Violence against protesters is unacceptable and cannot be allowed.”

Thousands of Belarusian protesters have been detained, with many of those released saying they had been mistreated or even tortured while in custody.

The runner-up in the election, according to the disputed official tally, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, has said that she is ready to assume a role as “leader of the nation” until a revote to confirm that she had won the election.

Tikhanovskaya, who has fled Belarus for EU member state Lithuania amid the police crackdown, said in a video address released on Sunday that preparations were under way to establish a legal basis for enabling a revote.

Tikhanovskaya, 37, is a former foreign language teacher who became a candidate after her husband, Sergei Tikhanovsky, an activist blogger who had hoped to run against Lukashenko, was jailed in the run-up to the election.

Another prominent potential candidate, former banking magnate Viktor Babariko, was jailed during the registration process. Yet another challenger, Valery Tsepkalo, a former ambassador to the US, fled to neighbouring Russia after a tip-off that he too would be arrested.

Lukashenko has described the protesters as “sheep” being led by foreign influencers. He said in a speech on Sunday that the Western military alliance NATO had been amassing troops near the Belarusian border.

The Belarusian military has announced that it would conduct massive war exercises near the border of NATO member state Lithuania from Monday to Thursday.

Russia, Belarus’ closest ally, has pledged to support the Belarusian military if needed, noting “pressure from outside” that country following its election, according to a Kremlin statement on Sunday.

SOURCE
GNA