EU Threatens New Belarus Sanctions After Protester’s Death
 
 
The European Union threatened to add sanctions
against Belarus over the “outrageous” death of a 31-year-old man died following
his detention by the police in the capital, Minsk.
Raman Bandarenka was taken away by police on
Wednesday following a clash between locals hanging ribbons on a park fence in
support of the opposition, and a group tearing them down, news website Tut.by
reported, citing unidentified eye witnesses. An hour and a half later he was
hospitalized, and he died Thursday evening, according to the site.
“This is an outrageous and shameful result of the
actions by the Belarusian authorities,” the European Union’s diplomatic service
said in a statement Friday. “The European Union has already imposed sanctions
on 55 individuals responsible for violent repression and intimidation, and
stands ready to impose additional sanctions.”
The country’s Investigative Committee said
Bandarenka was injured during the fight.
The death threatens to escalate a standoff between
the authorities and the protesters that has continued since President Alexander
Lukashenko claimed to win by a landslide on Aug. 9 in a vote the opposition
says was rigged. The opposition has called for a national minute of silence
Friday and for people to attend Sunday protests that regularly attract over
100,000 people in Minsk. Police crackdowns have intensified in recent weeks
damping the size of the weekend meetings.
The political crisis is the worst of Lukashenko’s 26
years in power and has forced him closer to Russia, which has provided
financial support as the protests and coronavirus pandemic have slowed the
economy. The U.S. and the European Union have not recognized the election’s
result.
The EU last week added Lukashenko to a blacklist of
Belarusian authorities implicated in ballot fraud and a subsequent crackdown on
protesters. The penalties involve asset freezes and travel bans.
The opposition has rallied around Sviatlana
Tsikhanouskaya, Lukashenko’s main challenger in the election. A former English
teacher who joined the race after her husband was jailed and barred from
running, Tsikhanouskaya has since fled to Lithuania and was awarded the
European Union’s top human rights prize last month.
The Russian leadership has refused to meet with
Tsikhanouskaya, although the country’s ambassador to the United Nations,
Vassily Nebenzia, said he attended an informal meeting with her, organized by
Estonia, according to RIA Novosti.
Russia’s position has not changed in regards to
Tsikhanouskaya, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters Friday.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


