#30 - JRL 2006-64 - JRL Home
Belarus: Few Hopes For A Fair Contest As Early Voting
To Begin
By Daisy Sindelar
Copyright (c) 2006. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org
Early voting for Belarus's presidential election is due to begin on March 14.
The vote pits incumbent Alyaksandr Lukashenka against three candidates who have
little, if any, chance of upsetting his bid for a third five-year term. In the
end, the importance of the Belarusian vote may not be its outcome, but the
public response it provokes. Will Belarusians take to the streets to protest an
unfair election -- and how will the state respond?
PRAGUE, March 13, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Not everyone is laboring under the
pretense that Belarus's upcoming presidential vote will represent a legitimate
political contest.
Some Belarusians interviewed by RFE/RL's Belarus Service on Monday said they
thought all candidates in the March 19 were being given equal opportunity to get
their message across. Others weren't so sure:
Woman: "It seems to me they get almost the same chance. They've all had equal
time on the radio and everything else. We're already bored with all their talk."
Man: "Lukashenka, as president, has better access to the press. But I think
the others get a sufficient opportunity to express their thoughts."
Woman: "No, no. It's not equal."
Man: "It's not equal."
Man: "Well, first of all, I think that the incumbent should temporarily
resign his duties in order to run for president. Otherwise, all these rallies
and the state press have no choice but to promote the president."
Man: "At present, we can't say they're equal. We see that TV and radio are
constantly promoting only one candidate -- the incumbent. The others don't have
even 5 percent of the opportunities and possibilities that he does."
Even so, the ruling regime of President Alyaksandr Lukashenka appears to be
taking no chances when it comes to ensuring election success.
Arrests
Riot police on March 12 arrested around a dozen Ukrainian and Belarusian
activists attending a Milinkevich rally in the capital Minsk.
Hanna Horozhenko, a television reporter with Ukraine's Channel 5, was
reporting live from the rally to news presenter Natalia Moseychuk when she and
her cameraman were also apprehended by police. Horozhenko, who began with a
straightforward report about the groups attending the rally, broke into
horrified screams as she was accosted by police and forced into a
law-enforcement van before her mobile phone was cut off.
Horozhenko and her cameraman were released after several hours, following an
intervention by the Ukrainian Embassy in Minsk.
But at least two of the Ukrainian activists have been given 10-day jail
sentences, and Belarusian authorities have said they will deport any foreigners
planning to take part in public rallies aimed at "destabilizing" Belarus ahead
of the election.
They have also accused the European Union and the United States of funding
the opposition with the aim of fomenting public unrest.
Brussels and Washington deny the claim. But they have already condemned the
vote as unlikely to be free or fair, and are watching carefully the run-up to
the election.
'Abysmal' Climate
In a hearing on March 9, the U.S. Helsinki Commission, a government agency,
criticized as "abysmal" Belarus's pre-election climate, and warned Lukashenka to
refrain from postelection violence against peaceful demonstrations.
Among the hearing's speakers was Belarusian student activist Iryna Vidanova,
who said the country's youth would play a "key role" in the elections.
"In Belarus, young people are the most open-minded, tolerant, and
pro-European segment of the population. It should come as no surprise that a
December survey found that more than one-third of those supporting the
democratic candidate Alyaksandr Milinkevich were under 30. Belarus has a very
young society, and many of these young people will vote for the first time. But
77 percent of young people doubt that the elections will be fair," Vidanova
said.
Arrests like those on March 12 underscore the lack of public trust in the
upcoming vote. They were just the latest actions by Lukashenka's camp to silence
opposition voices ahead of the ballot, which formally begins on March 14 with
early voting.
In recent weeks,scores of opposition supporters have been arrested, fined, or
otherwise harassed. Authorities have cracked down on nonstate newspapers and
censored television appearances by Lukashenka's political rivals.
Belarusian special forces went so far as to physically assault the second
opposition candidate in the race, Alyaksandr Kazulin, after he tried to enter a
building where Lukashenka was holding a political assembly in early March.
'Colored Revolutions'
Following the sweep of "colored revolutions" that brought political
transformation to Ukraine, Georgia, and Kyrgyzstan, many had hoped Belarus would
follow suit with a youth-driven "denim revolution" of its own.
But many in Belarus concede the country -- which under Lukashenka has enjoyed
economic and social stability -- is not yet ready for such an uprising.
Svyatlana Aleksiyevich, a Belarusian writer and passionate commentator on
Belarusian society, told RFE/RL's Belarus Service she has little hope this
week's election will bring change to the country: "I'm afraid that it seems to
me that we don't have the kind of internal strength to beat this situation. That
is primarily because the state is strong -- and also brazen, let's put it like
that. I've already said that [former Ukrainian President Leonid] Kuchma didn't
shoot on his own people. [Uzbek President Islam] Karimov -- he did. So let's
think, what kind of government do we have? For example, as far as I understood,
at a recent large gathering, they said troops would have automatic rifles with
which to defend this government. In fact, they're talking about defending a
single person."
Milinkevich has asked supporters to join him in central Minsk after polls
close on March 19 -- not for a revolution, but simply to "defend their choice."
But the country's top police official, Vladimir Naumov, has said all rallies
will be banned on election day. He has vowed to use "all means within the law"
to disperse protesters.
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