Protesters in Belarus dispersed with stun grenades
 
 
Belarusians took to the
streets of the capital Minsk on Sunday in a fresh demonstration against
strongman leader Alexander Lukashenko as anger mounted over the recent death of
an opposition activist.
Armed and masked police
dispersed protesters with tear gas and stun grenades and deployed water cannon,
local media reported, shortly after the latest march began against the
ex-Soviet country's strongman leader.
Belarusian rights group
Viasna said at least 328 people were detained, including journalists.
Some 15 metro stations were
closed and mobile internet access was limited, an AFP journalist reported.
Tens of thousands have taken
to the streets of cities throughout Belarus every weekend since August 9 when
Lukashenko claimed a sixth presidential term in elections that his critics and
Western countries said were rigged.
The EU has slapped sanctions
on officials in the authoritarian country for rigging the vote and waging a
brutal crackdown on post-vote demonstrations that led to mass arrests and
allegations of torture and abuse at the hands of the security services.
Sunday's rally comes after
thousands of demonstrators turned out in Minsk Friday to mourn the death of a
protester who was pronounced dead one day after police arrested him.
Roman Bondarenko, 31, died
in Minsk after police arrested him following a dispute in a city square that
has become a regular meeting place for the opposition.
He was arrested by police on
Wednesday after an altercation between residents and masked men who removed red
and white ribbons, the colours of the opposition, hung in a building courtyard
in Minsk.
Bondarenko was pronounced
dead on Thursday after suffering brain damage, triggering a wave of outrage
among the Belarusian opposition, who believe Lukashenko's security forces are
ultimately responsible.
Exiled opposition leader
Svetlana Tikhanovskaya described the former soldier Bondarenko as a "man
who was killed because he wanted to live in a free country".
On Sunday she described the
crackdown on protesters with "gas, grenades and firearms" as
"devastating" and called for international support for the
demonstrators.
"We ask our allies to
stand up for the Belarusian people and human rights. We need a humanitarian
corridor for the injured, support for the media, international investigation of
crimes," she wrote on Twitter.
Lukashenko said Friday he
had asked investigators to probe the incident "honestly and
objectively".
At least four people have
died in demonstrations against Lukashenko since August and the EU on Friday
condemned Bondarenko's death saying it could warrant further sanctions.
Lukashenko, who has the firm
backing of longstanding ally Russian President Vladimir Putin, has refused to
stand down and instead suggests reforms to the constitution to placate the
opposition.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


