Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 29 – Vladimir Putin’s
decision to force Mensk to agree to the establishment of a Russian base in
Belarus is empowering the Belarusian, weakening Alyaksandr Lukashenka, and
provoking spontaneous protests that threaten to destabilize Russia’s western
neighbor and one of its few remaining allies.
Uladzimir
Nyaklyayew, a Belarusian poet who heads the Tell the Truth! campaign and who is
slated to be tried tomorrow on charges that he organized demonstrations September
10 and September 23 against the opening of a Russian base, says that Moscow’s
plans are having unintended consequences in Belarus (svaboda.org/content/article/27275672.html
and charter97.org/ru/news/2015/9/29/171073/).
“This is obvious,”
he says, “not only from the independent media but also from the reaction of
people. And all this together is creating the opportunity for the spontaneous …
protest actions against the fraudulent elections and against foreign bases, and
in general against the policy of the authorities which have made the country
completely dependent on Russia.”
Even Lukashenka, he says, is trying
to turn away from that as a result.
Nyaklyayew says
that Belarusians are becoming to understand the lack of prospects for the
current regime nonetheless and to believe that protests are possible and may
lead to change. Such attitudes are “broader than the authorities may have
expected,” and consequently, the Lukashenka regime is using the courts to try
to frighten people away.
But he suggests that those efforts
will not work that that there will be another protest on October 4 against the
imposition of a Russian military base in Belarus. That would be just one week
ahead of the scheduled presidential elections there.
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