Opposition leader says 'peaceful revolution' under way in Belarus

Opposition leader says 'peaceful revolution' under way in Belarus

Exiled opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya told the EU parliament on Tuesday that a "peaceful revolution" was under way in Belarus after huge protests broke out over disputed presidential elections.

Belarus opposition figurehead Svetlana Tikhanovskaya is pictured during an AFP interview in Vilnius, Lithuania, on August 22, 2020. Tikhanovskaya urged pro-democracy protesters to keep up the momentum, saying President Alexander Lukashenko had "no choice"
AFP

The strongman leader of ex-Soviet Belarus Alexander Lukashenko claimed a sixth term in August 9 elections that sparked historic street rallies and a violent police crackdown condemned by rights groups and Western leaders.

"A peaceful revolution is taking place," Tikhanovskaya, 37, told EU parliamentarians, speaking in English via video link from Lithuania, where she fled after claiming victory in the ballot, fearing reprisals from the authorities. 

The trained English teacher who was allowed to contest the vote after her husband was jailed and barred from running said that the mass protest movement had no geopolitical aims.

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"It is neither a pro-Russian nor anti-Russian revolution. It is neither an anti-European Union nor a pro-European Union revolution. It is a democratic revolution," said.

Lukashenko, Europe's longest-serving leader, detained his closest rivals in the run-up to the vote which he barred independent observers from monitoring.

Hundreds of thousands of people have taken to the streets since election officials announced that the 65-year-old authoritarian leader had won a landslide victory with some 80 percent of the ballot.

Tikhanovskaya described the largest protests in Belarus's post-Soviet history as "a peaceful striving of the people for self-determination and basic dignity."

"The demand of Belarusians is simple: a free and fair election," she said. "This is the wish of the whole nation".

Several members of the opposition's Coordination Council that is seeking new elections have been arrested in recent days or summoned for questioning after Lukashenko accused them of attempting to "seize power".

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