Las Vegas Sun

April 25, 2024

Belarus leader pledges allegiance to Russia despite rift

MINSK, Belarus — Belarus's authoritarian leader vowed Tuesday to maintain a close alliance with neighboring Russia, even as he blasted it for sending in military contractors with allegedly nefarious purposes ahead of the vote — in which he's seeking a sixth term in office.

In a state-of-the-nation address ahead of Sunday's election, President Alexander Lukashenko said the partnership between the two countries reflects historic ties.

“Russia has always been and will remain our close ally, irrespective of who takes power in Belarus or Russia,” Lukashenko said.

The pledge contrasts with Lukashenko's diatribes against Russia following last week's arrest of 33 Russian contractors on charges of planning to stage mass riots. Moscow has dismissed the accusations, saying the contractors were heading to another country and stayed in Belarus after missing their transfer.

Even as he vowed to preserve warm relations with Russia, Lukashenko stood his ground on the arrested contractors, dismissing Moscow's explanations as lies. He asserted that those arrested told Belarusian investigators that they had been specifically sent to Belarus and told to wait for further orders.

He alleged that another group of “militants” had been sent to southern Belarus, adding that “we will have to run through the forests to catch them, but we will get them all.” He provided no further details.

The Belarusian leader warned Moscow against trying to stoke tensions, adding that instability could spread across the border and engulf Russia. “It will explode in such a way that it would reverberate all the way to Vladivostok,” he said, referring to Russia's far eastern port city.

In Moscow, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova dismissed the Belarusian accusations as a “theatrical performance,” but added that the close ties between the two nations are rooted in history and based on pragmatic cooperation.

In power for 26 years, Lukashenko has relied on cheap Russian energy and other subsidies and loans worth billions of dollars to shore up the Soviet-style economy in the nation of 9.5 million people. But at the same time, he has engaged in fierce economic arguments with the Kremlin, resisting Russian attempts to take control over Belarus's economic assets.

Russia this year has sharply scaled down its subsidies, saying Belarus needs to accept closer economic integration if it wants to receive Russian energy at a steep discount. Lukashenko has described the move as part of Moscow's efforts to subdue its neighbor.

Lukashenko obliquely referred to those arguments in his speech, lamenting that “Russia has shifted from brotherly to partner-like relations with us.”

But he argued that Moscow needs warm relations with its neighbor to the west.

“Russia fears losing us because it has no really close allies left except us,” he said. “And the West has shown increasing interest in us.”

Throughout his rule, Lukashenko has sought to scare the Kremlin with the prospect of turning to the West. The tactics have worked to some extent, even though Lukashenko has earned the nickname of “Europe's last dictator” in the West for his authoritarian ways.

The 65-year-old former state farm director has stifled dissent and independent media and extended his rule through votes the West has seen as rigged.

This time, the Belarusian leader has faced the toughest challenge yet from the opposition, amid public fatigue with his rule and fallout from the coronavirus pandemic. Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, the wife of a jailed opposition blogger, has unified fragmented opposition groups and attracted tens of thousands to her campaign rallies.

Early balloting began Tuesday in Belarus ahead of Sunday's election, which the opposition sees as fertile ground for vote-rigging.

Belarusian authorities have detained more than 1,000 participants in protests since the campaign's start.

In his speech, Lukashenko pointed to alleged plans to organize a “massacre” in Minsk — again giving no details — and sternly warned opposition supporters against holding unsanctioned protests.

“The response will be instant and the sanctions will be harsh,” he said.

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Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow contributed to this report.