EU to slap new sanctions on Belarus, airlines over escalating border
crisis
Send a link to a friend
[November 15, 2021]
By Sabine Siebold, Pawel Florkiewicz and Gabriela Baczynska
BRUSSELS/WARSAW/
MOSCOW (Reuters) - The
European Union will step up sanctions against Belarus, which on Monday
denounced as "absurd" Western accusations that it was driving a migrant
crisis that has left up to 4,000 people stranded in freezing forests on
its border with Poland.
EU foreign ministers are meeting in Brussels to agree on further
measures pressuring Belarus, where veteran leader Alexander Lukashenko
cracked down on protesters challenging as fraudulent a presidential vote
in which he had claimed victory.
The 27-nation EU slapped sanctions on Minsk for violating human rights.
Less than a year after the August 2020 election, migrants from Iraq,
Afghanistan, Congo and Cameroon started appearing on Belarus' land
borders with the EU, trying to cross into member states Lithuania,
Latvia and Poland.
"What we see in Minsk, this inhumane system of using refugees as tools
to exert pressure on the European Union, has not improved but has got
worse over the last days," Germany's EU Minister Haiko Maas said on
arriving to talks with his peers.
"We will toughen sanctions on individuals who are involved in this human
trafficking, and we will have to talk about the fact that severe
economic sanctions are inevitable ... We will have to tackle the
airlines, too."
Migrants from the Middle East and Africa had not previously used this
migration route to the wealthy European bloc.
Polish border guards have reported 5,100 attempted irregular crossings
from Belarus so far in November, compared to 120 in all of 2020.
Comparative numbers also spiked in the two Baltic states.
"Today we are going to approve a new package of sanctions," said the
EU's top diplomat, Josep Borrell, adding they will target airlines and
travel agencies involved in "this illegal push of migrants".
The Belarusian foreign ministry replied by dismissing as "absurd"
accusations that Minsk had engineered the migrant crisis on its borders
with the European Union, according to Russian state news agency RIA.
Lukashenko said Belarus was trying to convince migrants to go back home.
"But nobody wants to go back," he said, according to Belarus' state news
agency Belta. Minsk would retaliate against any new EU sanctions, he was
quoted as saying.
AIRLINES
Maas called on Lukashenko's most powerful ally, Russian President
Vladimir Putin, to put pressure on Minsk to stop risking people's lives
in a tug-of-war with the EU.
[to top of second column]
|
Migrants gather around a fire in a makeshift camp on the
Belarusian-Polish border in the Grodno region, Belarus November 14,
2021. Picture taken November 14, 2021. Oksana Manchuk/BelTA/Handout
via REUTERS
At least eight people have died along the
200-kilometre-long land border between Poland and Belarus, including
from cold and exhaustion.
The sparsely populated area of lakes, swamps and forests is becoming
even more hostile to people trying to keep themselves warm around
bonfires through the cold November nights.
Maas and Borrell urged Warsaw to allow humanitarian aid on the
frontier, where Poland has erected a barbed wire fence and deployed
some 20,000 police, border guards and soldiers.
The Kremlin said it was ready to mediate between Belarus and the EU,
that Putin would talk to Lukashenko, and that Moscow had no plans to
reroute gas flows away from Belarus despite Minsk threatening to cut
transit to Europe through the Yamal pipeline.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov also dismissed as "wrong" a U.S.
State Department statement that the Belarus border crisis was meant
to distract attention from increased Russian military activity close
to Ukraine.
EU members Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia have warned of a risk of
military conflict and their presidents will discuss the matter on
Monday with Poland's Andrzej Duda.
Travel agencies in the Middle East working in partnership with tour
operators in Belarus provided tourist visas to thousands of people
in recent months, a Reuters investigation revealed.
The EU would target airlines that are flying migrants from the
Middle East to Minsk in order to take them to the border, the bloc's
chief executive said. Maas stressed Turkish Airlines has stayed
away.
Lithuania's foreign minister called on the EU to also stifle
Belarusian airports. "We need to make the Minsk airport a
no-fly-zone," said Gabrielius Landsbergis.
(Reporting by Robin Emmott, Sabine Siebold, Maria Kiselyova, Dmitry
Antonov, Tom Balmforth, Olzhas Auyezov, Gabriela Baczynska,
Alexander Ratz, Thomas Escritt, Pawel Florkiewicz and Andrius Sytas,
Writing by Gabriela Baczynska, Editing by Catherine Evans)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |