Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 27 – When a dictator
decides his only remaining weapon against his own population is brute force,
the consequences -- unless that force is deployed in truly massive way -- almost
certainly include the further radicalization of the population and the increasing
likelihood the dictator will be compelled again to use more force against an
enraged populace.
That is the situation Alyaksandr
Lukashenka finds himself in after the mass arrests in Minsk and other
Belarusian cities over the weekend. By arresting hundreds of those protesting
against his regime – a large number but far smaller than Vladimir Putin did in
Russia at the same time – the Belarusian leader has shown that the social
contract he may have had earlier is void.
As a result, he will be compelled to
use ever more force, leaders of the opposition say, because his crackdown while
harsh was insufficient to intimidate the enraged Belarusian nation (belprauda.org/tri-kita-i-bespomoshhnost-rezhima-lukashenko/
and eurobelarus.info/news/policy/2017/03/27/vladimir-matskevich-rezhim-bol-she-ne-sposoben-kontrolirovat.html).
Moreover, other protest leaders add,
it is clear that Lukashenka understands that he has no other leverage left and
so will become ever more repressive, setting the stage for ever more serious
clashes with the population which is committed to continuing to demonstrate (belaruspartisan.org/politic/374670/
and charter97.org/ru/news/2017/3/27/245045/).
There are many ways to tell that an
act of intimidation like the one Lukashenka deployed has produced exactly the
opposite effect that he intended. Among
those that have surfaced in the last 36 hours are three that are particularly
important for the future of that country and its dictatorial leader.
First, Belarusian police were seen
to attack elderly people, a violation of social norms among Belarusians who
retain far greater respect for their elders than is the case in many countries
(charter97.org/ru/news/2017/3/27/245024/).
And in the wake of the police attacks, people began to collect money for those
arrested (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/3/27/245028/).
Second, various groups in Belarusian
society declared that they would remain in solidarity with the population
against the dictator. Among the most significant
of these are Belarusian students who have played and likely will play a major
part in future protests against Lukashenka and his regime (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/3/26/244995/).
And third the Roman Catholic churches in
Belarus offered prayers for the future of Belarus and Belarusians yesterday, an
action that many in Belarusian society will see as a vote of confidence in them
and even an expression of support from an important social institution (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/3/26/245005/).
But
perhaps the most obvious indication that Lukashenka has failed to intimidate
Belarusians but rather by his actions has had exactly the opposite effect is
what Belarusians themselves are saying in
the wake of the mass arrests. One
protester urged Belarusians to engage in acts of civil disobedience: “Don’t obey
the psychopath,” he said (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/3/26/244996/).
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