BELARUS NEWS AND ANALYSIS

DATE:

29/04/2006

Putin praises Belarus leader for 'working with opponents'

MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday offered rare international support to Belarus' President Alexander Lukashenko, whom he said had reached out to opponents following his contested re-election last month.

"It was nice to hear that you intend to work constructively with all sides," Putin told Lukashenko, a pariah in the West, during a televised meeting in a Saint Petersburg palace.

The meeting, part of which was broadcast on Russian state television, came a day after a court in the Belarussian capital Minsk sentenced chief opposition leader Alexander Milinkevich to 15 days in prison for attending what police said was an illegal demonstration.

Milinkevich, came a distant second in the election was jailed along with three other opposition figures in the former Soviet republic.

It came as Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Nato chief Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, meeting in the Bulgarian capital Sofia, clashed over Milinkevich's jailing.

"Belarus was one of the issues discussed where Russia and the alliance are quite far apart," NATO chief Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said after talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in the Bulgarian capital Sofia.

"We did not see eye to eye," he added.

De Hoop Scheffer said Belarus had failed to live up to Nato values enshrined in the Partnership for Peace, a cooperation agreement signed with ex-communist states after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

"These issues have to be decided through engagement and dialogue, not through isolation," Lavrov responded.

Belarus' authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko won a third term in office in a landslide victory in March 19 presidential elections that sparked protests at home and international condemnation.

The United States and European Union say the former Soviet farm boss' election victory to a third term on March 19 was neither free nor fair. Both Washington and Brussels have slapped visa bans on Lukashenko.

Putin's stand was in sharp contrast to the US and EU positions. He appeared to call on opposition activists - about 1,000 of whom have been briefly jailed since election day for attending anti-Lukashenko protests - to end their fight. "Once all emotions have subsided, I count on all who took part in the campaign to concentrate on development of the state," Putin was quoted as saying.

Lukashenko claimed that "almost the entire population and part of the opposition voted" for him, newspapers reported. Russia, together with China, Cuba and a handful of ex-Soviet republics, has bucked the Western outcry over the Belarussian election. Moscow props up Belarus' Soviet-style economy with vital export markets and cheap natural gas supplies, although the state-controlled Gazprom giant says the price is due to rise. Russia and the small ex-Soviet country of 10mn people, which borders EU-members Poland, Latvia and Lithuania, have also been engaged in talks on a possible unification for years.

The European Union and the United States slapped diplomatic sanctions on Belarus in the wake of the vote and a crackdown against opposition activists protesting Lukashenko's victory. - AFP

Source:

http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=83986&version=1&template_id=39&parent_id=21

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