From the DW:
“Belarus:
Thousands turn out for protests despite police threat to open fire”
For the 10th
straight weekend, anti-Lukashenko protesters marched through Minsk despite
threats from police to fire live ammunition. Police reportedly fired rubber
bullets into the air to disperse demonstrators. For the 10th weekend rally in a
row, tens of thousands of protesters opposing long-time President Alexander
Lukashenko marched through the capital
despite threats of force from authorities to open fire. Protesters were
heard chanting "Strike!" and "You and your riot police get
out!" Crowds of demonstrators waved red-and-white opposition flags,
marching through Minsk amid a heavy security presence. "There's no way back," protester
Anzhela Krasovskaya told French news agency AFP. "If they start shooting
then there would be even more people in the streets," she added. Over 200
protesters were arrested during Sunday's protests, Belarusian Interior Ministry
spokeswoman Olga Chemodanova told AFP,
adding that most of the detentions were in Minsk.
Water cannon
and rubber bullets Images from social media showed security forces
deploying water cannon and blockading streets with barbed wire and heavy
machinery. A local media reported that security forces fired rubber
bullets into the air in response to demonstrators throwing stones. An
Interior Ministry spokesperson later confirmed the reports, telling AFP the
rubber bullets were fired as a warning to protesters who threw stones at
police. Minsk authorities have also shut down a number of underground
metro stations as well and decreased mobile internet coverage in an attempt to
limit protests.
Over two
months of protests Demonstrators in the former Soviet republic have been
demanding Lukashenko's resignation for weeks. After more than two
decades in power, Lukashenko claimed another round of victory in the country's
August 9 elections over popular opposition candidate Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya.
Tsikhanouskaya, who fled to neighboring Lithuania after the vote, has
called on Lukashenko to step down before October 25, warning he would otherwise
face a nationwide general strike that would paralyze the country. Ahead
of Sunday's protest, Tsikhanouskaya urged Belarusians to continue their calls
for justice. "We will stop only when every political prisoner walks
free, when members of law enforcement begin to defend the people, and rule of
law and honest elections return to Belarus," she said. Belarus
security forces have so far arrested more than 13,000 people.
^ It’s great to
see the momentum continue. ^
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