Controlled by puppeteers Here’s what the Belarusian president had to say about last night’s crackdown on protesters
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The elections were a holiday. “Some [people] wanted to spoil this holiday. We saw them — they were even brighter [last] night. “Great queues demonstrated” outside of polling stations, deliberately delaying the vote in order to challenge the election results. But I asked the Central Election Commission to extend the voting — 20 minutes later there were no lines. After 8:00 p.m., crowds blocked 33 polling stations in Minsk, putting pressure on members of the election commissions, the military had to get involved. “Our, excuse me, sheep,” were controlled by puppeteers from Poland, Great Britain, and the Czech Republic. They also arrived from Ukraine and Russia — and dropped [off] “boys” with bayonets: in two cities they wanted to storm government bodies, in another [city] the district executive committee was surrounded, “border guards had to intervene.” We didn’t shut down the Internet in Belarus. “If the Internet isn’t working well, this isn’t our initiative, it’s from abroad.” Many were denied entry into the country in the last 24 hours, but, nevertheless, “they walked and wandered around all night, and tried to attack guys from the police” — who responded with dignity. It’s good that riot police protected the people in Minsk, that they didn’t let them get to the presidential residence, because it would have been a different kettle of fish there. The police officers acted mildly, rubber bullets were only fired during an attack on the police department. “They’re throwing around [the idea] that in [one] city the guys from the riot police almost put down [their] shields” — this is an absolute lie. At night, I instructed the KGB [the national intelligence agency] to provide security for [Svetlana] Tikhanovskaya’s campaign headquarters (they asked for this themselves), “So that, God forbid, they wouldn’t kill anyone: they needed a sacred sacrifice.” There will be no Maidan, we will not allow the country to be torn apart. They are trying to put pressure on Belarus from different sides purposefully, “they’re acting in a hybrid manner on all fronts,” but we will prevail.
Cover photo: Sergey Gapon / Reuters / Scanpix / LETA
(1) Waiting to vote
On the last day of voting in the presidential elections, long lines formed outside polling stations in Minsk and a lot of voters didn’t manage to vote before the polls closed. Several polling stations in Minsk went on working past 8:00 p.m. local time.
(2) Which ones?
Lukashenko is referring to the city of Novogrudok (Navahrudak) in the Grodno Region of Belarus, and in another small town.
(3) Which one
Lukashenko didn’t specify which city he was referring to, he just said it is located in the “very south of Belarus.”
(4) Internet problems
On the morning of August 9, the final day of the presidential elections, people in Belarus started experience problems with their mobile phones and internet connections. They were unable to access YouTube, as well as the messaging app Telegram, and popular news sites, including the government news agency “BelTA.”
(5) What actually happened?
Police officials say 39 officers were wounded and more than 50 civilians injured in Sunday night’s skirmishes in Minsk. According to human rights defenders, dozens of people were wounded and one person was killed. The Telegram channel Nexta Live reported three deaths, but according to police officials no one was killed at all. All total, more than 3,000 people were taken into police custody: 1,000 people in Minsk and the remainder from 32 cities across the country. The Investigative Committee has since launched a case over alleged mass rioting and violence against police.
(6) Svetlana Tikhanovskaya
Svetlana Tikhanovskaya (Svitlana Tsikhanouskaya) was President Alexander Lukashenko’s main rival during the presidential race. Tikhanovskaya’s campaign refuses to recognize the election results and maintains that she is the real winner of the elections.
(7) A what?
Here, Lukashenko is referring to the 2014 Euromaidan protests that overthrew the government and ousted then-president Viktor Yanukovych in Ukraine.