Belarus will shut transit routes if sanctions imposed, Lukashenko says

Belarus will shut transit routes if sanctions imposed, Lukashenko says

by Joseph Anthony
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Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko talks on the phone as he works at the Independence Palace, in Minsk

Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko, facing a nearly three-week popular uprising since a disputed election, threatened on Friday to cut off European transit routes across his country if sanctions are imposed.

Speaking during a dairy factory visit in the countryโ€™s east, Lukashenko said he would block European neighbours from shipping goods to Russia over Belarusian territory, and divert exports now shipped through ports in EU member Lithuania.

โ€œThey got fat and forgot what Belarus is. And thought we could be frightened off with rockets and tanks,โ€ Belta state news agency quoted him as saying. โ€œWell letโ€™s see who is afraid of whom. Weโ€™ll show them what sanctions are.โ€

Goods from landlocked Belarus account for almost a third of Lithuaniaโ€™s rail traffic and port volume. Belarus is also a major overland route for European goods bound for Russia, and carries pipelines used to ship Russian oil to Europe.

Lukashenko denies opposition accusations that he rigged an Aug. 9 election to prolong his 26-year rule. Thousands of people have taken to the streets to demand he step down. He says the protesters are funded by the West, and accuses NATO of massing forces on Belarusian frontiers, which the alliance denies.

Lukashenko said he had ordered half the army to enter combat preparedness, and had agreed with Russian President Vladimir Putin that their troops could unite in the event of a threat from the West.

โ€œIf they (NATO troops) donโ€™t hold still, itโ€™s necessary to use a joint grouping of armed forces, the basis of which is the Belarusian army,โ€ Lukashenko said. โ€œThe Russians must support us and follow us.โ€

Belarus is Russiaโ€™s closest ex-Soviet ally and its territory is an integral part of Moscowโ€™s European defence strategy. Nevertheless, Lukashenko is seen in Moscow as a truculent friend, and the Kremlin must decide whether to stick with him.

In the biggest sign yet of Russiaโ€™s willingness to intervene to prop up Lukashenko, Putin said on Thursday the Kremlin had set up a โ€œreserve police forceโ€ at Lukashenkoโ€˜s request, although it would be deployed only if necessary.

Speaking on Friday about the Russian force, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she hoped โ€œsuch troops are not deployedโ€.

The West has so far acted cautiously, balancing its sympathy for a nascent Belarusian pro-democracy movement with its concern over provoking intervention from Russia.

European Union foreign ministers on Thursday discussed sanctions against a list of up to 20 officials in Belarus to pressure Lukashenko into holding new elections.

Merkel told reporters she had tried to speak to Lukashenko by phone but he had declined. She said freedom of expression and the right to protest โ€œhave to be fought for there. The people must be allowed to do that themselves without interference from outside โ€“ from anywhere.โ€

REUTERS

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