From the BBC:
“Belarus: Hundreds join global
solidarity protests”
(A group of Belarusians and Poles
gathered in Warsaw Old Town)
Hundreds of people in Poland and
Lithuania gathered for protests on Saturday to show support for the opposition
in neighbouring Belarus. They called for the release of a Belarusian dissident
who was arrested along with his girlfriend when their flight was diverted to
Minsk. The pair's detention sparked global outrage, and prompted the EU to urge
airlines to avoid Belarusian airspace. Protests took place elsewhere in Europe
as well as in the US and Australia. Roman Protasevich, 26, and Sofia Sapega,
23, were flying from Greece to Lithuania on Sunday when a fighter jet was
scrambled over Belarus to escort their plane to Minsk airport over a bomb
threat which turned out to be fake. They were arrested as soon as the Ryanair
plane landed. "I'm calling on all EU countries and the US to please help
us free Roman and Sofia, as well as everyone else imprisoned," Mr
Protasevich's mother, Natalia, said at a rally in the Polish capital Warsaw. "We
want to live in a free country, in a country where everyone has the right to
express his beliefs," his father, Dmitry, added. The crowd at the Warsaw
rally waved the Belarusian opposition's red and white flag, and held signs that
read Help Belarus and Freedom for Belarus. "Things look really bad now.
That's why we need to do something, show those fighting back home that they're not
alone," Natallia Burak, a 35-year-old Belarusian living in the city, told
the AFP news agency. "As a Belarusian, we see a lot of wild and outrageous
things," another demonstrator added.
Belarusian President Alexander
Lukashenko, who has been in power for 27 years, has been nicknamed
"Europe's last dictator". The 66-year-old has cracked down on
dissenting voices, and many opposition figures have been arrested or fled into
exile. One such figure is the opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, who
spoke at a rally in Lithuania where she has been living in exile since last
August. "I believe that there will be changes very soon, there will be new
elections, because there can be no other way," she told a crowd gathered
in the capital, Vilnius. "Belarus will not give up." Ms Tikhanovskaya
and several hundred protesters marched to the Belarusian embassy in the city. A
similar demonstration also took place in Berlin, while smaller protests were
seen in dozens of countries including Ukraine, Ireland, and the Netherlands.
^ Hopefully the protests within
Belarus itself will continue since that is really the only way things will change
in Belarus. ^
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