Minsk
Tens of thousands of Belarusians rallied in Minsk on Sunday in the biggest demonstration yet against a disputed election, as President Alexander Lukashenko rejected calls to step down in a defiant speech.
Chanting “Leave!”, the protesters converged on a World War II memorial outside the city centre, with an AFP journalist estimating the turnout at up to 100,000 people, the largest yet in a week of demonstrations since the vote.
Other major Belarusian towns and cities also saw large rallies, local media reported. Columns of demonstrators raised victory signs and held flowers and balloons as they prepared to march to the central Independence Square, the focus of peaceful demonstrations in recent days.
Those taking part in the “March of Freedom” included a group of veteran paratroopers in uniform berets and a Catholic priest.
Demonstrators held placards with slogans such as “We are against violence” and “Lukashenko must answer for the torture and dead”.
“This has never happened before, that Minsk has united, Belarusians have united. This is a festival of freedom,” said Catholic priest Yury Sanko, wearing his dark habit.
“It’s the first time I’ve seen the people so glad,” said one 70-year-old woman protester. “We’re tired of these authorities, of living like serfs in a collective farm.”
Popular opposition candidate Svetlana Tikhanovskaya had called for a weekend of protests after leaving for neighbouring Lithuania following the disputed election, which gave Lukashenko 80 percent of the vote.
More and more Belarusians have taken to the streets over the last week to condemn Lukashenko’s disputed victory and a subsequent violent crackdown by riot police and abuse of detainees. Lukashenko, who has ruled the ex-Soviet country for 26 years, is facing an unprecedented challenge to his leadership.
In a rare campaign-style rally in front of flag-waving supporters in central Minsk, the 65-year-old strongman said: “I called you here not to defend me… but for the first time in a quarter-century, to defend your country and its independence.”
Lukashenko’s press service said 50,000 people attended the rally, though an AFP reporter put the number closer to 10,000. Standing at a podium in a short-sleeved shirt, Lukashenko insisted on the legitimacy of the presidential poll. “The elections were valid. There could not be more than 80 percent of votes falsified,” he said.
He warned that neighbouring EU countries and Ukraine were making calls for fresh elections.—AFP