Belarus opposition leader to ask Merkel about upping pressure on Lukashenko
The Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya
will meet Angela Merkel in Berlin on Tuesday, as the standoff in Belarus
increasingly takes on a geopolitical dimension, becoming one more bone of
contention between Russia and the west.
Tikhanovskaya said she will ask the German
chancellor about “her potential participation as a mediator” in talks between
protest leaders and the government of the embattled autocrat Alexander
Lukashenko, who has been backed by the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, and
has flatly refused to participate in negotiations.
“We will discuss ways to put pressure on Belarus,
because Belarusians think that only with pressure can we force the authorities
into dialogue with the people,” said Tikhanovskaya in a Skype interview from
her office in Vilnius. She has been based in the Lithuanian capital since she
was forced to flee Belarus after being threatened in a conversation with
officials the night after the disputed 9 August election which saw Lukashenko
win a sixth term.
“The Belarusian people already consider Lukashenko
to be illegitimate,” she said. “When we say negotiations with the government,
we are talking about people lower down; some people should take responsibility
and start these negotiations to find a way out of the crisis.”
Tikhanovskaya, who officially received only 10% of
the vote in the election, has declared herself national leader, and wants to be
a transitional figure until new, free elections can be held. For the past two
months, huge protests have rocked Belarusian cities every weekend, with
authorities responding with arrests, violence and threats. On Sunday, police
again detained protesters in Minsk.
Tikhanovskaya has increasingly received support from
western politicians, meeting the French president, Emmanuel Macron, in Vilnius
last week and Poland’s prime minister, Mateusz Morawiecki, before that. After
visiting Berlin, she will travel to Bratislava to take part in an international
conference.
Tikhanovskaya and other protest leaders have been
keen to emphasise from the beginning that theirs is not an anti-Russian or
pro-EU movement, and has no geopolitical agenda. But as Lukashenko clings on,
relying on the support of Russia, his claims that the opposition want to pull
Belarus away from Russia may become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
In the first two weeks of the protest, the Kremlin
appeared to be sitting back and weighing its options, but soon after there was
a shift in tone in official statements and on Russian state television, calling
Lukashenko the legitimate president and suggesting the protesters had backing
from abroad.
As Tikhanovskaya meets Macron and Merkel, Lukashenko
has travelled to Sochi to meet Putin, and received a number of Russian regional
governors in Minsk, who have showered his regime with praise. The Kremlin has
dismissed the opposition coordination council as unconstitutional, and Putin’s
spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, described Tikhanovskaya’s meeting with Macron as “a
meeting between the French president and a Belarusian citizen”.
Tikhanovskaya said she and her team had received no
contact at all from Russian officials, even informally or through
intermediaries. She conceded that perhaps the opposition should have tried
harder to speak with Russian representatives in the early stages of the protest
movement. “We were open to talk to everyone and said it many times, but maybe
we should have taken some steps to proactively seek out this dialogue,” she
said.
Tikhanovskaya said the Kremlin should realise that
betting on Lukashenko is bad policy. “They are experienced politicians, and I’m
sure they can see that Belarusians can’t accept these current authorities, and
cannot forgive them,” she said.
Asked what she would say if Putin did call her,
Tikhanovskaya said: “I would say I’m pleased to hear from you, Vladimir
Vladimirovich. Let’s discuss the fact that the Belarusian people in their own
country want to make decisions about with whom they want to build the country,
and the Belarusian people can no longer live under dictatorship, because we
have changed.”
She said she would also ask Putin to act as a
mediator, but said if the Kremlin asked for a guarantee that a new government
would not exit the Union State, the current alliance between Moscow and Minsk,
she would not be able to give it, words that are likely to alarm the Kremlin.
“I won’t talk for the future president of Belarus …
if the majority will want to build closer relations with one or another
country, it’s the will of the people, and the president will do what the people
want.”
Tikhanovskaya, a 38-year-old former English teacher,
had no political experience before this summer, when she became a last-minute
presidential candidate. Her husband,
Sergei Tikhanovsky, a popular YouTube blogger, had
planned to stand in the August election, but was jailed, along with another
would-be candidate, banker Viktor Babariko.
Tikhanovskaya said she would run in place of her
husband, and was allowed on to the ballot, apparently because Lukashenko
believed a woman would pose no threat. However, a growing protest mood
coalesced around her, and led to fury when the official results were announced.
Tikhanovskaya said she still has no ambitions to be president in the long term,
only to act as a transition figure, and said she was getting used to her new
role in international diplomacy.
“I wasn’t prepared for such high-level talks, I
would have needed a lot of time to prepare, but life has pushed me into them,
and I think I am coping with it well,” she said.



