From the MT:
“Baltic States Ban Belarus
Leader Over Election Fraud, Violence”
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania on
Monday blacklisted embattled Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and 29
other high-ranking officials over alleged election fraud and a crackdown on
pro-democracy protesters. The Baltic EU members announced their sanctions in a
coordinated effort to support the protests in Belarus, which are now entering a
fourth week since the country's disputed presidential election on August 9. "We
are sending the message that we need to do more than just issue statements, we
must also take concrete action," Lithuania's Foreign Minister Linas
Linkevicius told AFP. Lukashenko aside, the national blacklists also feature 29
officials including from the election commission, ministries and
law-enforcement bodies. Linkevicius said the lists may be expanded in the near
future. His Estonian counterpart Urmas Reinsalu said the Baltic states were
"demonstrating that we are addressing the human rights violations in
Belarus with utmost seriousness". The European Union is also mulling
travel bans and asset freezes on around 20 Belarus officials but the list
requires the approval of all 27 EU states. Some Western EU members say
sanctioning Lukashenko could hamper efforts to broker dialogue between the
authorities and the opposition and push him into Russia's arms. Formerly
occupied by the Soviet Union, the Baltic states are all now in the eurozone.
Latvia and Lithuania have borders with Belarus. Lithuania, which has taken a
lead in European diplomacy on Belarus, is giving refuge to Belarusian
opposition challenger Svetlana Tikhanovskaya.
^ The Western EU countries
(Ireland, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, western Germany, Luxembourg, Spain,
Portugal, Italy, Denmark, Cyprus, Greece, Malta, Sweden and Finland) never had
to deal with being occupied by the Soviet Union or have Russians on their soil.
Austria (until 1955), eastern Germany, Croatia, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Hungary,
Poland, Czech Republic and Slovenia did have to deal with Soviet Occupation and
Russian Troops on the soil. Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia not only had to deal
with Soviet Occupation, but also being part of the USSR. Those in Eastern Europe
know and understand the Russian mentality better than those in Western Europe
because they were forced to know and understand their enemy when they were
occupied. Western Europe should take its cue from Eastern Europe in this case.
^
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