From the BBC:
“EU agrees new Belarus
sanctions after plane arrest”
(A still from the video of Roman
Protasevich released on Monday)
The EU has decided to ban
Belarusian airlines from European skies after a flight was diverted to Minsk on
Sunday and an dissident journalist arrested. At a meeting in Brussels, the
leaders of the 27 member states also told EU airlines not to fly over Belarus,
and promised further economic sanctions. Roman Protasevich, 26, was on a flight
from Greece to Lithuania which was rerouted over a supposed bomb threat. Western
countries accused Belarus of "hijacking" the Ryanair plane. A video
has now emerged of Mr Protasevich that appears to have been recorded under
duress since his detention at Minsk airport. In the clip, which was released
late on Monday, the journalist said he was in good health and seemingly
confessed to crimes he had been charged with by the Belarusian state. But
activists, including the country's main opposition leader, criticised the video
and suggested Mr Protasevich was under pressure to admit wrongdoing. US
President Joe Biden described the actions of the Belarusian authorities as
"outrageous", saying they were "shameful assaults on both
political dissent and the freedom of the press". Mr Protasevich's father
has told the BBC he fears his son may be tortured. Dmitri Protasevich said on
Monday he was "really afraid" of how his son would be treated by the
authorities in his home country. "We hope that he will cope. We are afraid
to even think about it, but it's possible he could be beaten and tortured. We
are really afraid of that," he said in a video call. "We are really
shocked and really upset," he said. "This sort of thing shouldn't be
happening in the 21st Century at the heart of Europe. "We hope that the
whole international community, including the European Union, will put
unprecedented pressure on the authorities. We hope the pressure will work and
the authorities will realise they've made a really big mistake."
How did events unfold on
Sunday? Belarus sent a fighter jet to force Ryanair flight FR4978 - which
had departed from the Greek capital, Athens, and was bound for Vilnius in
Lithuania - to land, claiming there was a bomb threat. It touched down in the
capital Minsk at 13:16 local time (10:16 GMT) on Sunday. Police then
took Mr Protasevich away when the plane's 126 passengers disembarked. The
activist, who witnesses said was "super scared", was arrested along
with his girlfriend Sofia Sapega. Ms Sapega's mother told the BBC that
the 23-year-old had been taken to a Minsk jail, adding that the last word she
managed to write on her WhatsApp messaging account was 'Mummy'. The accusations
against her are unclear.
Belarus is the only European
country that still executes prisoners, and witnesses said Mr Protasevich told
fellow passengers he feared he would face the death penalty. Three other
passengers did not reach the plane's final destination in Vilnius. Ryanair
chief executive Michael O'Leary said he believed some Belarusian KGB agents
also departed the plane at Minsk, but this has not been independently verified.
Belarus said the flight had been diverted because of a bomb threat from the
Palestinian militant group Hamas. A senior transport official read a letter to
reporters that he claimed was from the militant group. "If you do not
fulfil our demands, the bomb will explode over Vilnius," it said. But
Hamas has denied any involvement. The group has no history or known capability
of mounting operations outside Israel and the Palestinian territories. German
leader Chancellor Angela Merkel said the Belarusian claim was "completely
implausible". The incident has drawn sharp condemnation from across the
world, with countries urging the immediate release of Mr Protasevich and a full
investigation. Dozens of Belarusian officials, including President Alexander
Lukashenko, are already under EU sanctions including travel bans and asset
freezes, imposed in response to the repression on opponents. State media in
Belarus said Mr Lukashenko, who has ruled the country since 1994, personally
gave the order for the plane to be diverted. The 66-year-old leader has cracked
down on dissenting voices since winning a disputed election last August. Many
opposition figures have been arrested, while others fled into exile.
Who is Roman Protasevich? Mr
Protasevich is a former editor of Nexta, a media operation with a Telegram
channel. He left Belarus in 2019 to live in exile in Lithuania. From there he
covered the events of the 2020 presidential election, after which he was
charged with terrorism and inciting riots. Nexta played a key role for
the opposition during the vote, which was won by Mr Lukashenko and is widely
regarded as rigged. It has continued to do so in its aftermath, particularly
with the government imposing news blackouts. Mr Protasevich now works
for a different Telegram channel, Belamova. He stepped in to write for it after
blogger Igor Losik was arrested by the Belarusian authorities in June last
year.
Belarus: The basics
Where is Belarus? It has
its ally Russia to the east and Ukraine to the south. To the north and west lie
EU and Nato members Latvia, Lithuania and Poland.
Why does it matter? Like
Ukraine, this nation of 9.5 million is caught in rivalry between the West and
Russia. President Lukashenko has been nicknamed "Europe's last
dictator" - he has been in power for 27 years.
What's going on there?
There is a huge opposition movement demanding new, democratic leadership and
economic reform. The opposition movement and Western governments say Mr
Lukashenko rigged the 9 August election. Officially he won by a landslide. A
huge police crackdown has curbed street protests and sent opposition leaders to
prison or into exile.
^ The EU banning Belarussian airlines
from EU Airspace and Airlines deciding not to fly over Belarussian Airspace is
a good start, but a lot more needs to be done to make sure Belarus and any
other country in the world knows that the International Community as a whole
will not tolerate making fake bomb threats and using Military Planes to force a
plane that has no emergency on-board to land. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.