From the MT:
“Tens of Thousands in
Lithuania Form Human Chain for Belarus”
Tens of thousands of Lithuanians
linked arms on Sunday in solidarity with the people of neighboring Belarus who
have been holding mass protests against authoritarian leader Alexander
Lukashenko since a disputed presidential election two weeks ago. The
participants formed a human chain stretching 30 kilometers (19 miles) from the
Baltic EU state's capital Vilnius to the border with Belarus, with many holding
the Belarus opposition's red-and-white flag as well as the Lithuanian national
tricolor. Solidarity rallies were also held in other European countries,
inspired by the historic Baltic Way demonstration on Aug. 23, 1989, when more
than 1 million Lithuanians, Latvians and Estonians linked hands to reject
Soviet rule. "We are with you, free Belarus, and we extend our hand to
you," Lithuania's President Gitanas Nauseda said after linking hands at
the border checkpoint. "The nations who had lost their freedom cherish it
the most. That is why Lithuania did not hesitate to declare its full support to
the Belarusian people who seek to shed the shackles of captivity," he
added. Organizers estimated that up to 50,000 people attended the rally in
Lithuania, with most demonstrators dressed in white and wearing face masks to
prevent the spread of the coronavirus. A hot-air balloon lifted a huge
Belarusian flag above Cathedral Square in Vilnius. Planes also flew over, with
flowers tossed down into the crowd. "Thirty
years ago, Lithuania was fighting and seeking support. Now we are the ones who
are providing support," 24-year-old art student Adele Sumkauskaite told
AFP. "We need solidarity among us. Hard to tell what good it will do but
moral support is very important," 50-year-old librarian Zina Koncaitiene
said. Lithuania's influential Catholic church also weighed in, offering Sunday
prayers for the Belarusian "march to freedom."
'We must help them' In
Latvia, hundreds of campaigners marched along the border with Belarus and then
formed a human chain in the village of Piedruja as Belarusian border guards
looked on from the other side of the Daugava river. "This is our Baltic
way to express solidarity with all the people in Belarus, who are demanding
pro-democratic change,” said Latvian activist Inese Vaivare after the
solidarity march along the Latvian-Belarus border. Human chains were also
scheduled to take place in the Estonian capital Tallinn and along the iconic
Charles Bridge in Prague. "These are people just like us, we must help
them," said Czech rally participant Monika MacDonagh-Pajerova. The
54-year-old was a leading figure of the 1989 Velvet Revolution, a peaceful coup
that toppled totalitarian Communist rule in the former Czechoslovakia. "I
remember the Soviet invasion in 1968 as a child. These were some of the worst
moments of my life. I also remember the euphoria of the Velvet
Revolution," she told AFP. "I hope the events in Belarus will be more
velvet than bloody."
Refuge for dissidents The
1989 Baltic Way human chain was 600 kilometers long and sent the strongest
signal to date that the Soviet-occupied Baltic states were on the road towards
restored independence, which they all won two years later. The original
Aug. 23 demonstration took place on the 50th anniversary of the infamous
Nazi-Soviet pact that carved up eastern Europe and led to the Baltic states's
annexation by the Soviet Union. The recreation reflects Lithuanian efforts
to consolidate international support for protests in its eastern neighbor,
notably after Vilnius gave shelter to Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana
Tikhanovskaya. The 37-year-old, who challenged Lukashenko at the
disputed Aug. 9 presidential election, thanked Lithuania in her video address.
"You like nobody else can understand Belarusians because you felt it
recently yourself," she said. "I hope that very soon we will
stand together not in a solidarity chain but in a chain of friendship with a
free Belarus," Tsikhanovskaya added. Lithuania and Belarus have
close historic ties, dating back to the 14th-century Grand Duchy of Lithuania,
but have followed very different paths since the breakup of the U.S.S.R. Lithuania,
Latvia and Estonia are firmly anchored in the West, having joined the European
Union and NATO in 2004, but Belarus has turned into one of the world's most
isolated states under Lukashenko's 26-year rule.
^ It is great to see so many ordinary
people around Europe and the world come together to support a free and
Democratic Belarus. Last year was the 30th Anniversary of the Baltic
Way – which helped make Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia independent from the
Soviet Union. These kinds of non-violent, but very symbolic protests show the
Belarussian people that they are not alone. The Belarussian people have lived
under Dictatorships for most of their modern history (Soviet Communist
Dictatorship from 1922-1991 and the Lukashenko’s Dictatorship since 1994) and
they deserve to finally live in peace and freedom. I really hope Belarus can
remove Lukashenko from power – hopefully he simply resigns – and that Russia doesn’t
invade and occupy the country. If those things happen I see Belarus as being a
buffer between the East (Russia) and the West (US and the EU) and that will help
lots of people in many countries. ^
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