From the BBC:
“Belarus: Lukashenko
inaugurated in unannounced ceremony”
How has the opposition
reacted? The opposition Nexta Live channel on the Telegram messaging app
called for street protests from 18:00 local time (15:00 GMT) and urged drivers
to block roads and create traffic jams. "Starting from this very
day, he [Lukashenko] officially becomes a bandit and fraudster who is not
recognised anywhere in the civilised world," the channel said. On
Wednesday evening, protesters marched to the centre of Minsk, some wearing fake
crowns to mock the inauguration. One placard read: "The king has no
clothes!" But there is a heavy police presence and a number of
people have been detained. Mr Lukashenko's main political rival,
Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, who fled to neighbouring Lithuania amid mass arrests,
said "after today [he] is neither a legal nor a legitimate head of
Belarus". Fellow opposition politician Pavel Latushko posted on
social media: "Where are the jubilant citizens? Where is the diplomatic
corps?" "It is obvious that Alexander Lukashenko is
exclusively the president of the Omon (riot police) and a handful of lying
officials." He called for "an indefinite action of civil
disobedience". Meanwhile, Lithuanian Foreign Minister Linas
Linkevicius described the inauguration as a "farce" and
"illegitimate" on Twitter.
Lukashenko busses in the party
faithful This was not the confident inauguration of a man who really
believes he has 80% of the country behind him. Everything about it was aimed at
avoiding a public reaction. There was no prior warning that the ceremony
would take place, and even when proceedings were under way there were no live
broadcasts on state television or radio. An audience of loyal officials was
bussed in and there appear to have been no foreign dignitaries. Not even the
Russian ambassador was invited. Belarus's opposition immediately called
for fresh demonstrations. But there are valid questions about where Belarus's
protest movement is going. Though the anti-Lukashenko demonstrations
still muster large crowds, particularly at the weekend, they have not led to
major fissures in the president's support base. The security forces and army
are still loyal and events (like the weekend rallies) that were once incredible
and unprecedented are now regular and almost routine. It is clear that
Russia - Belarus' most important ally - sees President Lukashenko as the
"least worse" option at the moment. While that remains the case
Belarus's leader seems determined to ignore the protests and carry on.
What is the background? Mr
Lukashenko, 66, claimed a sixth term as president in the widely disputed
election of 9 August. He insisted that he had won fairly with 80% of the vote
and depicted the protests against him as a Western-backed plot. Earlier this
month, he secured a $1.5bn (£1.2bn) loan from Russia. Ms Tikhanovskaya
claims to have won 60-70% in places where votes were properly counted. Many
opposition figures are now in self-imposed exile in neighbouring countries amid
a wave of arrests. Despite the crackdown, anti-government protests show
no signs of diminishing. On Sunday, a crowd of about 100,000 people staged
another rally in the capital, demanding that Mr Lukashenko step down
^ It’s clear that Lukashenko
knows that the Belarussian people do not love or want him as their President.
That is why he had to be inaugurated in secret. The President of any country
always has an inauguration in public so his/her citizens can see it. Only
criminals and people with things to hide do things in secret. ^
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