EU weighs further sanctions on Belarus over illegal migrants
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[October 18, 2021]
By Robin Emmott and Philip Blenkinsop
LUXEMBOURG (Reuters) - The EU will discuss
on Monday further economic sanctions on Belarus, including on airlines,
to increase pressure on President Alexander Lukashenko, whom it accuses
of helping undocumented migrants to enter Poland and the Baltic states.
A tightening of sanctions would follow broad measures imposed on
Belarus' economy in June over Lukashenko's crackdown on protesters
following his disputed re-election in August 2020. The protesters say
the election was rigged, which he denies.
Many EU states now also accuse Lukashenko of encouraging illegal
migrants, many from Iraq, Iran and Africa, to enter the European Union
via Belarusian territory in a retaliatory "hybrid war" they say aims to
destabilise the bloc.
"We need to introduce stricter sanctions ... It means to put so-called
tourism companies that are organising flights (under sanctions),"
Latvian Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkevics said as he arrived for a
meeting with his EU counterparts in Luxembourg.
"I also believe that we need to sanction Belavia fully, so that it
cannot receive any kind of support," he said, referring to the national
airline. Although Belavia has already been banned from flying over EU
airspace, it still leases planes from EU countries, notably Ireland.
Since August, Poland, Lithuania and Latvia have reported a surge in
illegal border crossings from Belarus. They accuse Minsk of flying in
migrants from abroad and dispatching them into the EU.
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Iraqi migrants talk to NGO Grupa Granica's representatives as they
are surrounded by border guards and police officers after they
crossed the Belarusian-Polish border during the ongoing migrant
crisis, in Hajnowka, Poland October 14, 2021. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/File
Photo
Lukashenko denies the accusation and has blamed the
West for what he says is a looming humanitarian catastrophe this
winter after migrants were left stranded and freezing on the
Belarusian-Polish border.
Germany, the EU's largest member state, Austria and the EU's top
diplomat Josep Borrell all expressed support on Monday for further
sanctions.
Ireland appeared wary of immediately preventing Belavia from leasing
planes because of legal obligations on existing contracts, although
Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said he was open to preventing future
deals.
"While Ireland wants to increase sanctions and pressure on the
Belarusian regime, we've also got to make sure that is practicable
and implementable," he told reporters in Luxembourg.
(Additional reporting by Sabine Siebold; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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