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Authoritarian leader of Belarus is sworn for a 7th term and tells his critics 'you have no future'

Authoritarian leader of Belarus is sworn for a 7th term and tells his critics 'you have no future'

Washington Post25-03-2025

TALLINN, Estonia — Belarus' authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko was sworn in Tuesday to a seventh term, and he mocked those who derided him as 'Europe's last dictator' by saying his country has more democracy 'than those who cast themselves as its models.'
'Half of the world is dreaming about our 'dictatorship,' the dictatorship of real business and interests of our people,' Lukashenko, 70, said in his inauguration speech at the Independence Palace in the capital of Minsk.
Hundreds of opposition supporters living abroad held anti-Lukashenko rallies Tuesday to mark the anniversary of Belarus' short-lived independence in 1918 following the collapse of the Russian Empire.
Lukashenko marked three decades in power last year, and his political opponents have denounced the tightly orchestrated Jan. 26 election as a farce. The Belarus Central Election Commission declared he won with nearly 87% of the vote after a campaign in which four token challengers on the ballot all praised his rule.
Opposition members have been imprisoned or exiled abroad by Lukashenko's unrelenting crackdown on dissent and free speech.
Months of massive protests that were unprecedented in the history of the country of 9 million people followed the 2020 election and brought on the harsh crackdown. Over 65,000 people were arrested, thousands were beaten by police and independent media outlets and nongovernmental organizations were closed and outlawed, bringing condemnation and sanctions from the West.
Thousands of Lukashenko supporters attended Tuesday's inauguration ceremony, where he denounced his critics as foreign stooges who were at odds with the people.
'You don't and won't have public support, you have no future,' he declared. 'We have more democracy than those who cast themselves as its models.'
Belarusian activists say it holds more than 1,200 political prisoners, including Nobel Peace Prize laureate Ales Bialiatski , founder of the Viasna Human Rights Center.
'The election was held amid a deep human rights crisis, in the atmosphere of total fear caused by repressions against civil society, independent media, opposition and dissent,' according to a statement released Tuesday by Viasna and 10 other Belarusian human rights groups. They said Lukashenko's hold on power is illegitimate.
Lukashenko has ruled the country with an iron fist since 1994, relying on subsidies and political support from Russian President Vladimir Putin, himself in office for a quarter-century, an alliance that helped the Belarusian leader survive the 2020 protests.
Lukashenko allowed Moscow to use the country's territory to invade Ukraine in February 2022 and later hosted some of Russia's tactical nuclear weapons .
Opposition leader-in-exile Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who fled Belarus under government pressure after running against Lukashenko in 2020, vowed to keep fighting for the country's freedom.
'Our goal is to break away from the Russian occupation and Lukashenko's tyranny, and to return Belarus into the European family of nations,' Tsikhanouskaya said in a speech at the Lithuanian parliament,
Some observers say Lukashenko could now try to mend ties with the West.
'Lukashenko already has been sending signals to the West about his readiness to start a dialogue and his desire to normalize ties in order to ease the total dependence on the Kremlin and soften Western sanctions during his seventh term,' said Valery Karbalevich, an independent political analyst.

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‘I just had flashbacks': Portland looks to avoid repeat of 2020 protests
‘I just had flashbacks': Portland looks to avoid repeat of 2020 protests

Politico

time39 minutes ago

  • Politico

‘I just had flashbacks': Portland looks to avoid repeat of 2020 protests

Before Los Angeles, there was Portland, Oregon. For more than 170 days in 2020, thousands of Portlanders gathered to protest police violence. They lay peacefully in the middle of the city's most iconic bridge and marched with a local NBA star — but also tore down statues and looted shops. Police launched tear gas canisters into crowds, while the 750 Department of Homeland Security agents President Donald Trump dispatched to the city without the approval of local or state officials grabbed protesters at night and loaded them into unmarked vehicles. As anti-Trump protests ramp up — with major rallies taking place across the country on Saturday — Portland officials are anxious to avoid a repeat of 2020. 'The Portland Police and then the feds overreacting in the way that they did, I think it brought even more people out because it was such injustice,' said Ali King, a veteran social organizer in Portland who worked for now-retired Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) at the time. 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Over the last week, there have been protests across the city, including outside the local ICE office. The vast majority have been peaceful, Schmautz said, with minor instances of violence or destructive behavior like arson. The department has arrested about 13 people over the last week. For a city so renowned for its protests that it was once called 'Little Beirut' by a staffer for George H.W. Bush (a moniker a local band proudly took as their own), the last week has been notably quiet. Day said this week shows the new policies are already helping deescalate. But 2025 is very different from 2020 in a key way: Then, Portlanders were protesting their own police department. Now, the target is the federal immigration apparatus. The police department will not assist ICE, Day explained, but needs to prevent violence or lawbreaking all the same. He calls the gray area for local police 'a very complex, nuanced challenge.' 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What to know about today's ‘No Kings' anti-Trump rallies across the US
What to know about today's ‘No Kings' anti-Trump rallies across the US

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

What to know about today's ‘No Kings' anti-Trump rallies across the US

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Ukraine has completed 47% of 2025 missile programme targets
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timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Ukraine has completed 47% of 2025 missile programme targets

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