Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 2 – For the first
time in two decades, Belarusian television did not broadcast the New Year’s
greetings of the president of Russia, an end to what one Mensk outlet called “the
absurd situation when Belarusians first were greeted by the president of an
alien country” (nn.by/?c=ar&i=141556&lang=ru).
But while it may be tempting to view
this as the latest example of Alyaksandr Lukashenka’s efforts to distance
himself from Moscow, the reason Putin’s message was not broadcast may have more
to do with a change in the clocks in Belarus than with a change in the
political weather there.
As “Nasha Niva” reports, many
Belarusians had been accustomed to marking the arrival of the New Year first “by
Moscow time” at 1100 pm local time and then again “by Mensk time” at midnight,
but this year, because Belarus is now again on Moscow time, the two coincided
and thus broadcasters had to choose between Putin’s address and Lukashenka’s.
Not surprisingly, given the control
Lukashenka has over them, they unanimously chose to broadcast his speech. But
as Russian outlets have pointed out, the Belarusian leader’s remarks were not
that nationalistic: they were not even delivered in Belarusian but in Russian (newsru.com/world/01jan2015/belorus.html).
Moreover, Belarusians were hardly
deprived of Putin’s message: many of them listen to Moscow channels, and these
channels carried the Kremlin leader’s words and equally important did not carry
the speech of the Belarusian president.
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