Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 22 – It is a measure
of just how worried the leaders of countries bordering Russia are about the
possibility that Vladimir Putin will build on his Crimean Anschluss by moving
against their states that even Alyaksandr Lukashenka feels the need to deny
that Mensk is oppressing ethnic Russians and to call on Belarusians to unite.
In a message to the Belarusian
parliament and people today, Lukashenka said that no one is mistreating ethnic
Russians in Belarus, long viewed as Moscow’s closest ally among the former
Soviet republics, and declared that Belarusians must unite as never before to
maintain their statehood (itar-tass.com/mezhdunarodnaya-panorama/1138372).
The Belarusian president noted at
the outset that he was issuing this appeal at a time when “the countries
surrounding [Belarusians] were in motion: Ukraine is bubbling, the Russian
Federation is trying to rise to its full historical height [and] borders are
being destroyed before our eyes.”
He said it was impossible to
separate out “Belarusian blood” from Russian and that all “talk about ‘Russianness’
or ‘Belarussianness’ is a step toward a time of troubles.” Consequently, he continued, one could not
think of anything “more stupid” than the idea of any oppression of ethnic
Russians by Belarusians or in Belarus.
Indeed, Lukashenka said, “there is
no other country in the world where the government and people are so supportive
of “the great Russian culture” and “the great Russian language.” The Russian language,
he said, is the “common” property of all three “fraternal peoples” and rejected
the idea of “those who want to privatize Russian. It is ours,” he said.
“If we lose the Russian language,”
he continued, “we will lose our mind,” but at the same time “if we stop
speaking Belarusian, then we will cease to be a nation.”
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