Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 9 – Many people
are suggesting that the crisis in Belarus must be resolved by talks between
Belarusians in the streets and Alyaksandr Lukashenka, but Oksana Shelest, who
tracks attitudes among the demonstrators, say that half of them do not believe
there is any possibility for such talks given Lukashenka’s approach.
Shelest, who has been talking to the
demonstrators in Minsk for several weeks
(windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2020/09/belarusians-in-streets-ever-more.html), draws this conclusion
on the basis of interviews with 61 of them (thinktanks.by/publication/2020/09/09/golos-ulitsy-polovina-oproshennyh-ne-verit-v-vozmozhnost-peregovorov-s-rezhimom.html).
In her report about the protesters
between August 31 and September 6, the sociologist says that repression has
increased but that more people have come out, especially women and students,
and that the protesters are increasingly organizing themselves along
professional lines or focusing on particular issues like the detention of
protesters or demonstrators.
More and more often people are
displaying the white-red-white flag and putting it back up with officials and
police take it down. They are also going to the people’s memorial on Pushkin
Square where an informal monument to the late Aleksandr Taraykovsky, who was
killed by the authorities, has developed.
The demonstrations have remained
peaceful, but as the authorities have used more force, the protesters have taken
certain steps such as clustering around women or shifting their location to protect
themselves. Sometimes these tactics work, and the siloviki withdraw rather than
risk inflicting harm on more people, Shelest says.
Belarusians
remain committed to Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who won the vote and who leads
the protesters from Lithuania. What is striking, the Belarusian sociologist
says, is that protesters rarely talk about other issues besides their basic complaints
about lying and repression.. They don’t mention the pandemic and they don’t
talk about the economy.
“Practically all those who took part
in the survey,” she continues, “say that they will ‘stand to the end,’” a shift
from earlier when often people said that they might withdraw from the streets
if repression increased dramatically. Now,
ever more of them talk about the protests lasting as long as two years,
although they hope for a resolution sooner.
More Belarusians are now talking
about what foreign countries and especially Russia may do to overcome the
impasse. They doubt that any talks are
possible with Lukashenka not because they aren’t prepared to do so but because they
do not believe Lukashenka is capable of taking part as a trustworthy
participant.
Ever more clearly, Belarusians in the
streets are expressing concern about what Russia may do. Most of them “do not
believe” that Russia will intervene militarily. But they do now talk about “the
threat of ‘becoming an appendage of Russia,’ losing real sovereignty, and ‘the
sale of the country’ in exchange for [Lukashenka’s] holding on to power.”
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