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EU moves to impose individual sanctions against Belarus

It is still not clear whether incumbent President Alexander Lukashenko will be blacklisted
The Council of Europe EPA/OLIVIER HOSLET
The Council of Europe
© EPA/OLIVIER HOSLET

BRUSSELS, August 14. /TASS/. Foreign ministers of the European Union’s 27 member states have made a political decision Friday to impose individual sanctions against people "responsible for violence against peaceful protesters and the election fraud" in Belarus, the reports were confirmed by Slovak Foreign Minister Ivan Korcok.

"Important discussion of EU Foreign Ministers on Belarus [took place], consensus [was reached] that elections were rigged. EU starts working on individual targeted measures against those responsible for violence against peaceful protesters and the election fraud," the minister wrote on Twitter.

A source in one of the delegations to the European Council earlier told TASS that EU foreign ministers agreed to impose targeted sanctions against "Belarusian officials responsible for violence and human rights abuses." According to the diplomat, the ministers instructed EU diplomatic services to draft a blacklist soon. At the same time, the source refused to answer whether incumbent President Alexander Lukashenko himself would be blacklisted.

The EU foreign ministers are holding an urgent video conference on Belarus that continues to be gripped by protest rallies after the recent presidential election on August 9.

Previous sanctions

The European Union first targeted Belarus with sanctions in 2004 as a response to disappearance of two opposition figures, a journalist and a businessman in 1999-2000 and later expanded them in 2011 for violating standards for holding presidential election (December 2010) and human rights abuses. In 2016, the EU decided to suspend sanctions against some natural persons and four companies but kept embargos on arms and police equipment in place.

These sanctions were temporarily suspended in September 2008 after Moscow recognized independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia on August 26, 2008. However, the sanctions were reinstated after the presidential election in December 2010 and later tightened.

Belarus protests

On August 9, Belarus held the presidential election. Earlier on Friday, the national Central Election Commission declared the official results, showing incumbent President Alexander Lukashenko securing his reelection with 80.1% of the votes. His key rival Svetlana Tikhanovskaya came second with 10.12%. After exit poll results were revealed when voting was closed, many cities and towns across the country saw mass protests that in some cases turned into clashes with the police. The national Interior Ministry said a few thousand people had been detained since Sunday, while dozens of police officers and protesters were injured.

Tikhanovskaya’s campaign staff rejected the election results and does not recognize Lukashenko’s victory. Tikhanovskaya herself fled the country late on Monday and is now in Lithuania, latest reports suggest.