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Freeing the rest of us could be Trump's 'great victory', Belarusian dissident Tikhanovsky says
Freeing the rest of us could be Trump's 'great victory', Belarusian dissident Tikhanovsky says

France 24

time09-07-2025

  • Politics
  • France 24

Freeing the rest of us could be Trump's 'great victory', Belarusian dissident Tikhanovsky says

Europe 11:43 Issued on: From the show Exiled Belarusian opposition leaders Sergey Tikhanovsky and Svetlana Tikhanovskaya granted a joint interview to FRANCE 24 from Vilnius. Tikhanovsky, who was recently released after more than five years in prison, called on US President Donald Trump to "go further" and free the remaining Belarusian political prisoners. "Belarus can be a success story for all of us," he said, describing his release as the result of a "joint international effort" including Trump's team and European leaders. Reunited with his wife and fellow Belarusian opposition leader Tikhanovskaya in Vilnius, Tikhanovsky explained that his daughter "didn't recognise" him when he returned home. "That broke my heart," he said. "She spent most of her life without me. But now I will be there for her." He also insisted he "did not sign anything" to abandon politics in return for his freedom. Tikhanovskaya warned that Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko remains "very vulnerable" as "most Belarusians hate him", adding "we all understand that Lukashenko is [a] puppet of [Russian President Vladimir] Putin".

Belarus opposition leader Tikhanovsky freed from jail following visit from top Trump envoy
Belarus opposition leader Tikhanovsky freed from jail following visit from top Trump envoy

France 24

time21-06-2025

  • Politics
  • France 24

Belarus opposition leader Tikhanovsky freed from jail following visit from top Trump envoy

A top Belarus opposition leader, Sergei Tikhanovsky, has been released from jail after being pardoned, Belarusian human rights group Viasna said on Saturday. His wife Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, who took over the opposition cause after his jailing, shared a video of him smiling and embracing her after his release with the caption: "FREE". Tikhanovskaya's team said that the popular blogger and activist had arrived in Vilnius, Lithuania, alongside 13 other political prisoners. Tikhanovsky's release came just hours after the Belarusian authorities announced that the country's authoritarian President, Alexander Lukashenko, met with Trump's Ukraine envoy Keith Kellogg in Minsk. Tikhanovskaya said Saturday that officials from the United States had helped secure her husband's release. "It's hard to describe the joy in my heart," she said in a post on X, thanking US President Donald Trump, US envoy Keith Kellogg and European allies. Belarus marks one year since disputed presidential election 02:04 Tikhanovsky, 46, had been imprisoned for more than five years. He planned to run against Lukashenko in the August 2020 presidential election, but was arrested and detained weeks before the vote. His wife Svetlana – a political novice at the time of his arrest – took his place in the polls. He was sentenced in 2021 to 18 years in prison for "organising riots" and "inciting hatred" and then to 18 months extra for "insubordination". Belarus, ruled by Lukashenko since 1994, has outlawed all opposition movements and is the only European country to retain the death penalty as a punishment. There are more than 1,000 political prisoners in the country, according to Viasna.

Belarus opposition leader calls for Radio Free Europe to stay on air
Belarus opposition leader calls for Radio Free Europe to stay on air

Yahoo

time25-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Belarus opposition leader calls for Radio Free Europe to stay on air

The Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya has called for US foreign broadcaster Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) to keep broadcasting, despite its uncertain future. "Free media are our link between the truth, between the people in exile and the people in the country," she said in a speech in the Lithuanian parliament on Tuesday. "If these media die, they will be replaced by propaganda media." Tikhanovskaya, who lives in exile in the European Union, was referring to the dramatic moves by the new administration in Washington. "RFE/RL is threatened with closure following funding cuts by US President Donald Trump's administration. Several European countries, led by the Czech Republic, are discussing ways in which RFE/RL can be preserved," she said. RFE/RL began broadcasting during the Cold War and has had an office in Lithuania from which it covers neighbouring Belarus since the beginning of 2023. The dissemination and use of its news has been a criminal offence in Belarus since Minsk declared the broadcaster an "extremist organization" in 2021. In August 2020, Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko, in office since 1994, was again declared the winner of the presidential election, unleashing mass protests that were brutally suppressed. The opposition, however, saw Tikhanovskaya as the real winner. The EU no longer recognizes Lukashenko as head of state. He is considered to be completely dependent on Russian President Vladimir Putin. RFE/RL's Vilnius office is staffed by Belarusian journalists who went into exile like Tikhanovskaya after the 2020 elections. They produce television and radio programmes in Belarusian, which are also broadcast online. The programmes are broadcast from the RFE/RL broadcasting centre in Prague, where the station has been based since 1995. The centre also makes programmes in Russian, Ukrainian and other languages, reaching nearly 50 million people in 23 countries every week, the broadcaster said. Since taking office, Trump has drastically cut funding for numerous government offices that focus on domestic and international affairs alike. This, combined with Washington's pivot to Russia, is deeply worrying to many in Europe, particularly as the Kremlin's war on Ukraine rages on.

Lukashenko extends three-decade Belarus rule, West denounces vote
Lukashenko extends three-decade Belarus rule, West denounces vote

Express Tribune

time27-01-2025

  • Politics
  • Express Tribune

Lukashenko extends three-decade Belarus rule, West denounces vote

MINSK: Belarus autocrat Alexander Lukashenko, in power since 1994, won a seventh consecutive term in office Sunday in an election denounced by the European Union and the exiled opposition. With his opponents in prison or exiled, the 70-year-old ruler appeared to have won 87.6 percent of the vote, according to an official exit poll. Lukashenko has orchestrated a ruthless crackdown on opponents since huge protests against him in 2020. This time around, the candidates picked to run against him actually campaigned in his favour. Exiled opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya called the election a "farce", while the EU described it as a "sham". Lukashenko, however, said he did not care whether or not the bloc recognised the results. And he had "no regrets" over letting his "older brother" Russian President Vladimir Putin's troops enter Ukraine through Belarus in 2022 -- despite hundreds of thousands of deaths in the three-year conflict. The vote took place five years into a wave of heightened repression in Belarus, during which time rights groups say the country has jailed more than 1,200 political prisoners. In Sunday's election victory he won more of the vote than in 2020, when he won 81.04 percent. Belarus's 2020 election ended in nationwide protests with demonstrators accusing Lukashenko of rigging the vote. Tens of thousands of Belarusians fled their country in the aftermath of the 2020 protests as the KGB embarked on a repression spree, mainly to neighbouring Poland and Lithuania. Lukashenko said Sunday his opponents were behind bars or abroad out of choice. "Some chose prison, some exile," he said. "If it is prison then it's those who opened their mouths too widely," he added. Repenting and asking for pardon were preconditions for any prisoner releases, he said during a news conference that lasted four hours and 25 minutes. In Warsaw, home to many exiled Belarusians, opposition leader Tikhanovskaya described Lukashenko as a "criminal who has seized power". Many people wore masks and some refused to speak to AFP, explaining they had relatives in Belarus and criticism could make trouble for them. "It's just a country with the illusion of choice," 22-year-old student Aliaxandra said, adding that some of her compatriots had been living in fear "for decades". Tikhanovskaya told AFP in an interview this month she wanted dissidents to be ready for an opportunity for change in Belarus. But she admitted that it was "not the moment". AFP

Belarus's strong-arm leader Lukashenko cruises to reelection
Belarus's strong-arm leader Lukashenko cruises to reelection

Boston Globe

time26-01-2025

  • Politics
  • Boston Globe

Belarus's strong-arm leader Lukashenko cruises to reelection

Unlike in 2020, when Tikhanovskaya was allowed to run against Lukashenko and declared herself the winner, Sunday's election was a tightly controlled and tame affair, featuring only candidates loyal to the president. None expressed any desire to actually defeat Lukashenko, who has ruled Belarus with an iron fist since 1994. Advertisement Tikhanovskaya, out of the country since 2020, did not take part in Sunday's election and was instead in Warsaw, Poland, leading a protest against Lukashenko, who mocked her efforts and claimed that US President Trump had cut off funding to her opposition movement in exile. He appeared to be referring to an executive order last week that halted virtually all foreign aid for a 90-day reassessment period. Three candidates running against Lukashenko, according to the exit poll, garnered less than 2 percent of the vote each. A fourth, the leader of the Communist Party, Sergei Syrankov, captured 2.7 percent. At a televised election debate last week, which the president did not join, Syrankov, saying he wanted to be 'honest,' acknowledged: 'Everyone in this studio knows that Alexander Lukashenko is going to win.' With all of Lukashenko's prominent opponents either in jail or in exile and Belarus's media outlets all cheering for the incumbent, the result was a foregone conclusion. But it is one that still mattered to the president, who is eager to show his country — and also President Vladimir Putin of Russia — that the turmoil of 2020 has been tamed. Advertisement In a statement Sunday, the European Union's foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, described the election as a 'sham' that 'has been neither free, nor fair.' But foreign election observers, drawn from far-right political parties like Alternative for Germany and other pro-Russian groups, hailed the vote as a triumph for democracy and denounced tart criticism of the election by the European Parliament and other institutions. 'They say that there is a dictatorship here, but I don't think so — the reality in Belarus is completely different,' Krastyo Vrachev, an observer representing a fringe nationalist party from Bulgaria, told Belarus's state news agency. 'People are calm and communicate with ease, in Europe this is not at all the case,' he added. The election was certainly calm, so much so that Lukashenko barely bothered to campaign, saying he was too busy to take part in a debate with four, state-selected rival candidates or to hold rallies. In a nod to conventional politics, however, last week he signed a decree raising pensions by 10 percent starting Feb. 1. A recent survey of public opinion in Belarus by Chatham House, a British research group, indicated widespread dissatisfaction with the economy, which has been hit hard by economic sanctions imposed on the country over its support for Russia's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Just 11 percent of respondents were definitely satisfied with the economy, while only 32 percent said they supported Russia's invasion. Lukashenko's main appeal, according to the survey, is his 'favorable image' as a 'politician striving to prevent Belarus from being involved in the military conflict following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.' Advertisement Russian troops used Belarus as a staging ground for an initial, abortive thrust toward Kyiv in early 2022, but Lukashenko has resisted pressure from Moscow to send Belarus's troops to join the fight against Ukraine. After casting his vote Sunday in Minsk, the capital of Belarus, Lukashenko predicted that 'there will be some kind of resolution this year,' to the conflict, adding that Trump 'is not an idiot, not a fool' and recognizes that 'you can't push us around,' referring to Belarus and Russia. 'We will see light at the end of the tunnel this year,' he said of the war. While delighting in taunting the West, particularly neighboring Poland, and displaying his loyalty to Russia, Lukashenko has in recent months signaled a desire to improve frosty relations with Western capitals by releasing political prisoners. This process, widely seen as an effort to get relief from Western sanctions, continued Friday when Lukashenko pardoned 15 more prisoners, including five people jailed for 'extremist crimes,' a blanket term used to describe criticism of the president. The names of those released were not made public. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, in a social media post Sunday, indicated that they included a US citizen whom he identified as Anastasia Nuhfer 'who was taken under JOE BIDEN!' he said in the post. Rubio said Nuhfer had been 'unilaterally released' thanks to Trump's leadership. At a news conference in Minsk on Sunday, Lukashenko denied that he was releasing prisoners to curry favor abroad, saying, 'I don't give a damn about the West.' He said his decision to set some people free 'is based on the principle of humanity.' Advertisement None of Lukashenko's most prominent opponents, who include Tikhanovskaya's husband, Sergei, have been set free. The United States and European Union have left sanctions in place. This article originally appeared in

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