Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 23 – Alyaksandr
Lukashenka has pardoned and released Nikolay Statkevich and five other
Belarusian political prisoners, an action that the West has long sought and
that is clearly intended to send a message to both the West and Moscow that the
Mensk leader wants to improve ties with the West even as his relations with
Moscow are souring.
Yesterday, Lukashenka pardoned
Statkevich, who ran against him for the Belarusian presidency in 2010, as well
as Nikolay Dedko, Igor Olinevich, Yevgeny Vaskovich, Artem Prokopenko, and Yury
Rubtsov. Statkevich, who was serving a six year term, had 16 months left in his
sentence (belta.by/society/view/prezident-belarusi-prinjal-reshenie-o-pomilovanii-v-otnoshenii-rjada-lits-159933-2015/).
Their release was welcomed not only
by Belarusians who oppose Lukashenka but
also by the European Union which declared that this was “a long-awaited step.” International
efforts to free Statkevich, who has sometimes been called “a Belarusian
Mandela,” have been going on since his initial arrest.
The six were greeted joyfully on their
release, but speculation immediately began as to why Lukashenka had taken this action
precisely now. Statkevich and other
Belarusian opposition figures said that the Belarusian leader had been forced
to do this because of his need for aid from the West given the meltdown in the
national economy and problems with Moscow.
Statkevich himself said that he had
expected to be released only after the Belarusian elections and that in his
view, he had been released now only because “Lukashenka has run out of money”
and he is seeking aid from the European Union to make up the shortfall (charter97.org/ru/news/2015/8/23/165764/).
That puts the West in a difficult
position, he suggested. If it provides money to Lukashenka, it will strengthen
his repressive regime; but if it doesn’t, Lukashenka will be driven back into
the arms of Moscow, however much he no longer appears to welcome that Russian
embrace.
Statkevich added that he doesn’t
think the IMF or the Europeans will provide assistance until after the
presidential elections. The IMF plans a visit only in October, but Lukashenka
needs money now. He will try to get it from Moscow but apparently increasingly
uncertain as to whether he can get it from that source, Lukashenka is trying to
open a way to the West.
Whatever happens, the opposition
figure said he would continue his fight to transform Belarus into “a normal
country” (belaruspartisan.org/politic/315012/).
Other
opposition figures shared Statkevich’s views. Andrey Sannikov and Dmitry
Bondarenko said that no one should think Lukashenka had acted out of good
will. The economic catastrophe had
forced him to free the prisoners. And Vitatly Rymashevsky warned that no one
should forget that the nature of the reigme had not changed and that “at any
moment” Lukashenka could take new hostages (charter97.org/ru/news/2015/8/23/165776/ and charter97.org/ru/news/2015/8/22/165737/).
For background on what has been happening
with the relationships between Belarus, Russia and the West in the days before this
decision, see “Belarus Moving Away from Russia and Moscow Isn’t Happy,” August
22, at windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2015/08/belarus-moving-away-from-russia-and.html.
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