Belarus opposition council members questioned in criminal case
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[August 21, 2020]
By Andrei Makhovsky
MINSK (Reuters) - Two leading members of a
newly formed opposition council in Belarus were questioned on Friday in
a criminal case that accuses the body of trying to seize power from
President Alexander Lukashenko after a disputed election.
Dozens of supporters accompanied Maksim Znak and Sarhey Dyleuski as they
arrived for questioning at the headquarters of the Investigative
Committee.
Znak, a lawyer, said on entering that he feared he might be arrested.
But when he emerged later, he said he had "productive discussions".
"We gave our explanation, we will continue to work," he said.
The Coordinating Committee was launched this week with the
self-described aim of negotiating a transfer of power amid the largest
political crisis in Belarus since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Lukashenko, in power for 26 years, was declared the winner of an Aug. 9
presidential election, but tens of thousands of protesters have taken to
the streets saying the election is rigged.
A police crackdown does not seem to have intimidated the protesters and
opposition has spread to include strikes at state factories long seen as
bastions of Lukashenko's support.
Public figures from sport and the media have deserted him in recent
days, significant developments in a country where the state controls
nearly all cultural bodies.
"NOT MY PRESIDENT"
Vadim Devyatovsky, an Olympic silver medalist previously prominent as a
Lukashenko supporter, wrote on Facebook that Lukashenko was "not my
president". His previous position was "treason to myself" and having
switched sides "everything has become lighter", he said.
Lukashenko's main opponent, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, has fled to
neighbouring Lithuania, where she has released a steady stream of video
messages calling on her followers to rise up peacefully. On Friday she
called for more workers to go on strike to protest against the election
result.
At her first public news conferece since going into exile, the
37-year-old political novice said she would return to Belarus when she
felt it was safe.
Prosecutors opened a criminal case on Thursday alleging that the
Coordinating Committee was set up as an illegal attempt to seize power.
The committee, made up of dozens of public figures including a Nobel
Prize-winning author and the ousted head of the country's main drama
theatre, says its aims are peaceful and its tactics lawful.
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Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsihkanouskaya listens during
a news conference in Vilnius, Lithuania August 21, 2020.
REUTERS/Stringer
Council member Deleuski said after Friday's questioning that he had
told the investigators the body did not seek power but aimed to
mediate.
"There is a disputed situation now between the authorities, the
state, and the people of the Republic of Belarus. We were
established to settle this situation in a safe way, without
conflict, by peaceful means."
The European Union, which has rejected Lukashenko's re-election,
called for the case to be dropped.
"We expect the Belarusian authorities to stop the criminal case and
instead to engage in a dialogue in view of moving towards a peaceful
way out of the current crisis," Nabila Massrali, an EU foreign
policy spokeswoman, said.
Belarus is a close ally of Moscow and the crisis is a test for the
Kremlin, which must decide whether to stick with Lukashenko or try
to engineer a transfer of power.
It is also a challenge for the West. The country's borders with
Poland, Lithuania and Latvia are NATO frontiers and eastern European
states have spoken in support of the opposition.
But European officials are also keen avert a repeat of unrest six
years ago in neighbouring Ukraine, when a pro-Russian leader was
toppled in an uprising and Moscow intervened militarily.
That has meant a cautious approach, including reassuring Moscow the
West is not trying to pry Belarus from Russia's orbit.
"Belarus is not Ukraine: the people there are not seeking closer
ties with the EU," a senior EU official told Reuters.
The EU was trying to encourage Belarusian authorities to negotiate
with the opposition, "without tilting the geo-political balance for
Belarus between the EU and Russia".
(Additional reporting by Gabriella Baczynska in Brussels; writing by
Peter Graff; Editing by Jon Boyle and Angus MacSwan)
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