From Reuters:
“Fury over “state piracy” as
West weighs action against Belarus”
Western politicians accused
Belarus on Monday of state piracy amounting to a “warlike act”, searching for a
way to retaliate that would match the gravity of the offence after Minsk forced
an airliner down and arrested a dissident journalist. Sunday's action, in which
a Belarusian warplane intercepted a Ryanair flight between European Union
members Greece and Lithuania and forced it to land in Minsk, has few
precedents, and denunciations were worded in the strongest terms. Belarus
authorities arrested a passenger, 26-year-old Roman Protasevich, whose social
media feed from exile has been one of the last remaining independent outlets
for news about the country since a mass crackdown on dissent last year. "This
was effectively aviation piracy, state sponsored," said Ireland's Foreign
Minister Simon Coveney. Swedish Foreign Minister Ann Linde said: "It is
dangerous, reckless and naturally, the EU is going to act."
The head of the foreign affairs
committee in the British parliament, Tom Tugendhat, noting that the flight was
between two members of both EU and the NATO military alliance, said: "If
it's not an act of war, it's certainly a warlike act." Belarus says it was
acting in response to a bomb threat on the flight, although this turned out to
be false. It said on Monday its ground controllers had given guidance to the
flight but had not ordered it to land. Russia accused the West of hypocrisy,
noting a precedent: that in 2013 a flight from Moscow carrying Bolivian
President Evo Morales had been diverted to Austria after reports fugitive U.S.
intelligence leaker Edward Snowden might be on board. The issue was set to
dominate a scheduled summit of EU leaders, but options for an effective
response may be limited. The EU and the United States already imposed several
rounds of financial sanctions against Minsk last year, which had no effect on
the behaviour of long-serving leader Alexander Lukashenko, a close Russian ally
who withstood mass demonstrations against his rule after a disputed election.
AIRLINE HALTS FLIGHTS OVER BELARUS
At the very least, the incident will disrupt air traffic patterns
in Europe, with a Latvian airline, airBaltic becoming the first on Monday to
announce it would no longer fly over Belarusian air space. Ryanair's
boss Michael O'Leary, who referred to the incident as a state-sponsored
hijacking, said he believed security agents had been on the flight and had
disembarked in Minsk. That would mean the operation had effectively been
coordinated with spies operating on the ground in Greece. "The EU
will consider the consequences of this action, including taking measures
against those responsible," EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said in
a statement on Monday. European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said
"the outrageous and illegal behaviour of the regime in Belarus will have
consequences".
Minsk has shrugged off previous
sanctions since last year, which consist mainly of adding various officials to
black lists which restrict their right to travel or do business in Europe and
the United States. The EU was already working on a fourth round before the
Ryanair incident. Additional steps could now include suspending overflights of
EU airlines over Belarus or banning the Belarusian airline Belavia from landing
at EU airports. An EU official said suspending ground transit could also be
discussed. After Protasevich was arrested, flight 4978 was allowed to travel on
to Vilnius, where weary passengers disembarked. One, who gave his name as
Mantas, described the moment when the pilot had come on the intercom to tell
passengers they were being diverted to Minsk, with no explanation. Protasevich
immediately shot to his feet, knowing his time was up. "Roman stood up, opened the luggage
compartment, took luggage and was trying to split things," giving a laptop
and phone to his female companion, Mantas told Reuters. Once the plane landed,
police took Protasevich away. "We saw from the window that Roman is
standing alone, and one policeman with dog was trying to find something"
in his luggage, Mantas said. Another exhausted passenger, speaking to reporters
without giving her name, said Protasevich looked "super scared". "I
looked directly into his eyes and he was very sad."
^ Belarus has broken numerous
International Laws and the European Union, the United States, Canada,
Australia, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United Nations needs to penalize
Belarus – especially Lukashenko – so that he will never think of doing such a
thing ever again. Of course Russia (and I’m sure China) back what Belarus did.
Dictatorships always stick together no matter what. There needs to be a very
strong International Reaction and even stronger consequences for Belarus, Lukashenko
and his minions. An immediate consequence is that no foreign airlines should
use Belarussian Air Space (not even to willingly land in Belarus.) ^
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