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Belarus revolution

fernando | 15.08.2005 12:22

Waiting for revolution in Belarus

 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4150072.stm

The former leader of the Solidarity movement in Poland has said he would support a people's revolution in neighbouring Belarus.

Lech Walesa who won a Nobel Peace Prize and went on to become Poland's president, was speaking on the 25th anniversary of the union's founding.

In an interview for the BBC's World This Weekend programme, he said Belarus should expect no support from the West.

He said the European Union should be ready to support a reformed Belarus.

Iconic figure

Lech Walesa likes to describe himself as a revolutionary.

Even 25 years after the founding of Solidarity, the trade union movement which eventually toppled Communist rule in Poland, he is regarded still as an iconic figure by many in central and eastern Europe.

Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko
Alexander Lukashenko has led Belarus for more than a decade
Now he is turning his attention to Poland's neighbour, Belarus, considered to be the most repressive state in Europe.

President Alexander Lukashenko brooks no criticism and opponents are often treated harshly.

Mr Walesa says he would support a revolution there, similar to those which have taken place in Ukraine and Georgia.

However, he gave a warning that the people of Belarus should expect no help from the West, just as Poland had been left to struggle on its own in the 1980s.

But he said that if there were to be a change of regime there the European Union should immediately open its doors to Belarus as a way of encouraging democracy.


 http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/8/143C1FAA-260D-45DB-86BB-92B5DC0B8BBA.html

12 August 2005 -- Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka today said that a Polish plan to broadcast independent radio news to his country was "a waste of time."

Lukashenka said the planned radio programming "will have zero effect because Belarusians approve of the way the country is being run."

Poland announced earlier this week that it planned to start radio broadcasts to Belarusians who have no access to independent media.

The $40 million project is to be funded by the European Union. Belarus television channel Bel-1 reported the plan included setting up transmitters along Belarus's northern border with Lithuania.

Lukashenka said "the main practical result will be to give a few officials in these countries [Poland and Lithuania] a bit of cash, but otherwise the money is being thrown away on the wind."

fernando

Comments

Hide the following 3 comments

Orchestration

16.08.2005 12:17

I've spoken to people who live in Belarus; and they're quite adamant that they're happy with their country and no they aren't poorly informed and no they don't want a US/EU orchestrated 'revolution' like the Ukraine thank you very much.

If anything, they fear that propaganda will come from the west and destroy their way of life, which is unsophistacted but quite satisfactory.

Paul


choice and democracy

16.08.2005 20:36

Belarusians that came to visit me recently were not aware of any revolution in Ukraine, let alone the choice to obtain media that contains debate, inc debate of whether the revolution was orchestrated by the Americans/CIA.

This is not about wanting the lifestyle and the materialistics of the west, it is about wanting a democratic election and government, and for relatives not to be arrested for leaving their homes, leafletting opposition views, or to stop critics disappearing.

Fernando


@ Paul

17.08.2005 13:41

Having lived in a totalitarian state myself, I can assure you that information obtained from random denizens of such a country is extremely unreliable because a) the very fact that they were in a position to communicate with someone from outside should raise doubts as to what position they have in their own society and b) they might withold what they really think from a stranger, fearing that whatever critical comments they come up with will be put on record.

Lasse