28 Aug 2020

Putin says he could send police to Belarus if necessary

2:01 pm on 28 August 2020

Russian President Vladimir Putin says he has formed a police reserve force to intervene in Belarus if necessary, but that point has not yet been reached.

(FILES) This file photo taken on December 20, 2019 shows Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) followed by Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko (L), entering a meeting hall during the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council, in Saint Petersburg. -

Photo: AFP

Speaking on Russian state TV, he said Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko "asked me to set up a certain police reserve" and "I have done so".

"We also agreed that it won't be used until the situation gets out of control," he told Rossiya 1TV.

Lukashenko's disputed 9 August re-election triggered huge protests.

Separately, at least 13 journalists - including a BBC team - were detained in the centre of the capital, Minsk, ahead of a planned opposition protest. The interior ministry said they had been taken to a police station for identity checks, but the BBC's Steve Rosenberg said it was a "clear attempt to interfere with coverage of events".

Putin said Russia had an obligation to help Belarus with its security under the two countries' close alliance, and he stressed the deep cultural, ethnic and linguistic ties between the two nations.

He said the new reserve force would not go into Belarus unless "extremist elements using political slogans as cover cross a certain boundary and start armed robbery, setting fire to cars, houses, banks, try to seize government buildings and so forth".

He added that "on the whole, though, the situation now is levelling out".

Poland's Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said Putin was using the idea of restoring control in Belarus to hide a hostile breach of international law.

He said the plan must immediately be withdrawn.

Russia and Belarus are members of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation, made up of a number of post-Soviet countries.

The two nations formed a union in 1996 that promoted greater integration as well as guaranteeing citizens the right to work and reside freely in both countries.

The EU and US have rejected the 9 August Belarus vote as neither free nor fair. The EU is preparing sanctions against officials it accuses of rigging the result to deliver Lukashenko's victory and of cracking down on the opposition movement.

The scale of the demonstrations in the Belarusian capital Minsk is unprecedented. Lukashenko claimed a sixth term, after 26 years as president already, with 80 percent of the vote.

A criminal case has targeted the opposition Co-ordination Council, which Lukashenko accuses of trying to seize power.

The most prominent opposition leader inside Belarus, Maria Kolesnikova, has been questioned by prosecutors. Arriving at the investigative committee building in Minsk, she was applauded as she urged supporters not to give up.

Prosecutors questioned the Nobel literature prize-winner Svetlana Alexievich on Wednesday. She told reporters she had refused to answer their questions, and said the council's activities were totally legal.

The council was launched by Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, the leading opposition candidate for president, who is now in exile in neighbouring Lithuania.

- BBC

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