EU leaders urged to tell Moscow not to meddle in
Belarus
Calls for bloc to use emergency meeting to send strong
message against military intervention
Jennifer
Rankin in Brussels
Mon 17 Aug
2020 18.10 BSTFirst published on Mon 17 Aug 2020 13.24 BST
EU leaders
are being urged to tell Moscow not to meddle in Belarus when they hold an
emergency meeting to discuss the unprecedented street protests facing “Europe’s
last dictator”, Alexander Lukashenko.
As tens of
thousands of protesters gathered in Minsk for the largest rally in the
country’s recent history, the president of the European council, Charles
Michel, invited the EU’s 27 heads of state and government to an extraordinary
meeting by video conference on Wednesday. “The people of Belarus have the right
to decide on their future and freely elect their leader,” Michel tweeted.
“Violence against protesters is unacceptable and cannot be allowed.”
The
decision to call an EU summit – an idea deemed unlikely in Brussels just a week
ago – reflects the rapid pace of events in cities across Belarus, after
Lukashenko urged Vladimir Putin to save his regime over the weekend.
Lithuania’s
foreign minister, Linas Linkevičius, one of the most active EU voices on
Belarus, told the Guardian that European leaders needed to send a strong
message to the Kremlin against military intervention in Belarus, while voicing
doubts that it was desired by Moscow.
“I hope
it’s not realistic, I hope it will not happen, but I cannot exclude, I cannot
deny because it is publicly discussed, and definitely we should keep this in
mind and send a very clear message that it is not tolerable if Russia decides
to do that.”
The EU does
not see military intervention by Russia as a likely outcome for now.
Referring
to protests in Russia’s far east that have rattled Kremlin elites, Linkevičius
added any intervention would be “very complicated” domestically for the Russian
government.
“The
European Union voice in the level of heads of state could be important, because
we see that now the de facto leadership of Belarus is at a crossroads, they are
hesitating, thinking, contemplating what they can do.”
Lukashenko
was “the main source of instability now”, said the Lithuanian foreign minister.
“He is desperately looking for a way out, not for the country, but for himself
… And by acting like this, it’s very difficult to predict what he is going to
do.
“The
government has calmed down the repression … It was a good step, but they’re
still not ready for any talks,” he said, urging Belarusian officials to choose
between Lukashenko and the Belarusian people: “The moment of truth is coming
and coming very fast.”
On Monday
Donald Trump weighed in, describing it as a “terrible situation”. He added: “We
will be following it very closely.”
EU
officials said the situation was evolving quickly as record numbers of people
took part in weekend rallies. The summit is billed as a moment to send a
message of solidarity to the people of Belarus.
“The sheer
numbers clearly show that the Belarusian population wants change, and wants it
now. The EU stands by them,” said the EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell,
who also called for a “thorough and transparent investigation” into widely
reported abuses by Belarusian state security, “in order to hold those
responsible to account”.
Joerg Forbrig,
the director for central and eastern Europe at the German Marshall Fund
thinktank, said: “What we have seen in the last 24 hours or a little more is
obviously a completely new dynamic. The EU needs to take this to a higher
level.”
He added:
“The EU needs to make it very clear to Russia that there are ways of resolving
this peacefully. It needs to make it absolutely clear that the Russian
appearance in this situation, or even an invasion in Belarus of some sort,
would carry consequences.” The analyst suggested the EU needed to step in with
an offer of conducting dialogue that includes Russia, via the Organisation for
Security and Cooperation in Europe.
The OSCE, a
body that counts EU member states and Russia as members, said it had not been
invited to monitor the latest elections in Belarus.
The German
government, which currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency, on Monday
called for a “national dialogue” between the government and opposition to
overcome the crisis. The German government’s spokesman, Steffen Seibert,
suggested the OSCE could play a role with “a review of the election”.
Describing the mass demonstrations across Belarus as impressive and moving,
Seibert said: “These people should know that Europe stands by them.”
EU foreign
ministers agreed last Friday to start work on sanctioning Belarusian officials
responsible for the electoral results it deemed neither free nor fair, as well
as those responsible for the bloody crackdown on peaceful demonstrators.
Sanctions
are unlikely to be agreed until the end of next week at the earliest. One EU
diplomat said the “time-consuming” process of agreeing a list could take at
least a month or more.
Borrell
will update leaders on progress in drawing up the sanctions list on Wednesday
at the summit – only the second held in August in EU history. (The first, in
August 2014, was dedicated to Ukraine and the appointment of new EU leaders.)
On Monday
the UK foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, added his voice to support sanctions.
Raab said the UK did not accept the results of the presidential election and
called for an independent investigation “into the flaws that rendered the
election unfair, as well as the grisly repression that followed”. He said the
UK would “work with our international partners to sanction those responsible,
and hold the Belarusian authorities to account”.
The UK is
obliged to enforce all EU sanctions until the end of the year under the terms
of the Brexit-transition agreement.
Meanwhile
the largest political forces in the European parliament – representing 80% of
MEPs – called for new and free elections under the supervision of independent
monitors. “The 9 August presidential elections were neither free, nor fair, and
credible reports point to a victory of Svetlana Tikhanovskaya,” said the
statement signed by leaders of the centre-right European People’s party, the
Social Democrats, centrist Renew Europe, the Greens and the European
Conservatives and Reformists. “We therefore do not recognise Alexander
Lukashenko as the re-elected president of Belarus and consider him a persona
non grata in the European Union.”
While the
European parliament has few foreign policy levers, it can help set the EU
agenda. The groups called on the EU to appoint a high representative to Belarus
to support a peaceful and democratic transition of power, as well as relaunch
EU financial programmes aimed at Belarusian people.

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