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The officials spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of Clinton's trip to Vilnius, near Lithuania's border with Belarus. Life inside President Alexander Lukashenko's country will probably be a major topic of discussion there. On Wednesday, Belarusian police violently dispersed the latest peaceful rally by thousands of people protesting Lukashenko's regime and the country's worst financial crisis since the fall of the Soviet Union two decades ago. The Vesna rights advocacy group said police arrested more than 100 and beat many with truncheons. It is the latest crackdown from the government of Lukashenko, who has ruled the nation of 10 million people with an iron hand for nearly 17 years, earning the nickname of "Europe's last dictator." In Budapest, where the focus was on Lantos' legacy, officials and family members from Hungary and the United States offered their tributes. Clinton noted how the Democrat founded Congress' human rights caucus in 1983, while Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said Lantos represented the love of freedom shared by the U.S. and his country. Orban, however, also used the event to also warn about the far-reaching effects of economic turmoil. "Indebtedness, whether that of households or entire countries, clearly limits freedoms," Orban said. He borrowed the words of President John Adams, who said there are two ways to conquer and enslave a nation
-- by the sword and by debt.
[Associated
Press;
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